homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Giant, ancient bat discovered in New Zealand could walk on all fours

The extinct species offers a glimpse into New Zealand's long-lost mammal fauna.

Tibi Puiu
January 11, 2018 @ 2:52 pm

share Share

Fossils of a giant burrowing bat, about three times larger than today’s average bat, were discovered by paleontologists in New Zealand. The ancient species belongs to a lineage that used to flourish in the southern landmasses of Australia, New Zealand, South America and possibly Antarctica.

An artist's impression of a New Zealand burrowing bat, Mystacina robusta, that went extinct last century. Credit: Gavin Mouldey.

An artist’s impression of a New Zealand burrowing bat, Mystacina robusta, that went extinct last century. Credit: Gavin Mouldey.

Judging from its teeth and bones, Vulcanops jennyworthyae — named so after researcher Jenny Worthy who found the fossils — likely weighed an estimated 40 grams. Even at this modest weight, it’s the biggest burrowing bat that we know of.

Burrowing bats not only fly but also scurry about on all fours. It’s common to see them foraging for animal and plant food on the forest floor and along tree branches. Although they also lived in Australia, nowadays, burrowing bats can only be found in New Zealand.

If it was anything like today’s burrowing bats, Vulcanops j. must have had a broad diet comprising of both plants and animals. Burrowing bats commonly chase down insects and other invertebrates like weta and spiders, but also consume fruit, flowers, and nectar. Due to its large size and specialized teeth, Vulcanops j. should have been capable of eating even more plant food as well as small vertebrates — a diet more like that of its South American cousins.

Vulcanops jennyworthyae

Vulcanops jennyworthyae likely enabled the giant extinct bat to eat a broader diet than its cousins. Perhaps it also munched on small vertebrates. Credit: Scientific Reports.

“Burrowing bats are more closely related to bats living in South America than to others in the southwest Pacific,” says study first author and University of New South Wales Professor Sue Hand.

They are related to vampire bats, ghost-faced bats, fishing and frog-eating bats, and nectar-feeding bats, and belong to a bat superfamily that once spanned the southern landmasses of Australia, New Zealand, South America and possibly Antarctica.

Around 50 million years ago, all of these landmasses were part of the same giant continent called Gondwana. The climate was also wildly different with average global temperatures up to 12 degrees Celsius higher than today. Antarctica, for instance, was covered in lush forests and was ice-free. After tectonic activity fragmented these landmasses, Australasia’s burrowing bats became isolated from their South American relatives.

“The fossils of this spectacular bat and several others in the St Bathans Fauna show that the prehistoric aviary that was New Zealand also included a surprising diversity of furry critters alongside the birds,” said study co-author, Associate Professor Trevor Worthy of Flinders University.

The fossil dig site at St Bathans in New Zealand. Credit: Trevor Worthy.

The fossil dig site at St Bathans in New Zealand. Credit: Trevor Worthy.

Vulcanops’ lineage became extinct not long after the early Miocene, when the climate in New Zealand took a sudden swing, becoming far colder and drier. The environmental changes left many species vulnerable — and Vulcanops was not alone. Numerous species couldn’t adapt, including crocodiles, terrestrial turtles, flamingo-like palaelodids, swiftlets, several pigeon, and non-flying mammals.

Today, only two bat species comprise the entire native land mammal fauna in New Zealand. All other land mammals in the country have been introduced by humans over the past 800 years.

The findings appeared in the journal Scientific Reports. 

share Share

Titanic 3D Scans Reveal Heartbreaking Clues About the Final Minutes Before It Sank

The ship was actually close to surviving the encounter with the iceberg.

That 2022 Hepatitis Outbreak in Kids? It Was Apparently COVID

A new study reveals evidence that immune cells, liver cells and viral leftovers created a dangerous combination.

This Simple Trick Can Make Your Coffee Taste Way Better, Says Physics

If you love pour-over coffee it could serve you well to change how you pour.

But they're not really dire wolves, are they?

and this isn't a conservation story

A 97-Year-Old Tortoise Just Became a First-Time Mom at the Philadelphia Zoo

Mommy has been living at the Philadelphia Zoo for 90 years, and waited until old age to experience motherhood.

Earth Might Run Out of Room for Satellites by 2100 Because of Greenhouse Gases

Satellite highways may break down due to greenhouse gases in the uppermost layers of the atmosphere.

Federal Workers Say They’re Being Watched by AI for Saying Anything Bad about Trump or Musk

AI monitors federal workers for ‘anti-Trump’ and 'anti-Musk' language as oversight erodes, insiders say.

The World’s Smallest Flying Robot Is Here. It Weighs Less Than a Raindrop and It’s Powered by Invisible Forces

The world’s lightest untethered flying robot takes to the air.

Pulse Oximeters Seem To Be Misreading Oxygen in Darker Skin

Bias in pulse oximeters isn't just a clinical glitch — it’s a systemic issue that puts patients with darker skin at risk.

Birds Are Changing Color in Cities. Here’s Why

Birds in cities are getting flashier — literally.