New sonar devices to aid bat bounce-back
New sonar devices
to aid bat bounce-back A long-tailed breed of little
Hamilton natives, who navigate by sonar, is threatened with
extinction by hungry rats and loss of suitable trees. So
Environment Waikato (EW) and Hamilton City Council (HCC),
along with the Riverlea Environment Society, have launched a
new conservation initiative called Project Echo to help
Hamilton’s population of long-tailed bats spread their
wings more widely. In recent years, bats have been
detected in Hammond Bush, Riverlea, at the city’s southern
end. But recent research by Waikato University MSc student
Darren Le Roux has shown that bats are in fact more wide
spread along the southern urban-rural interface of Hamilton
City than previously thought. Bats are now also known to use
the Hamilton Gardens, Hamilton Cemetery and Sandford
Park. This local resident population of bats, whose
numbers are uncertain, makes Hamilton one of the only
confirmed New Zealand cities to support this threatened
mammal species. Now Project Echo is trying to find out if
the bats are also roosting in other parts of the city to
help with efforts to support the species in Hamilton. The
project involves HCC funding Riverlea Environment
Society’s purchase of bat detection devices from Britain
which convert the sonar signal bats send out into a sound
audible to humans. The bats live in small cavities in
large, native and exotic trees, including dead trees, and
are threatened by marauding rats and loss of suitable
habitat. People who suspect bats may be present on their
properties can contact EW to arrange to borrow the detection
equipment free of charge.
“If people think they have
bats on their sections or are about to remove a large or
dead tree they can contact the regional council,” said the
chair of EW’s regional pest management committee Simon
Friar, whose responsibilities also include
biodiversity. “We’ll then contact the society and
arrange the loan of the equipment, collect any information
from residents about what they find, and share the info with
the society and HCC. “This sort of information can help
in deciding where to carry out rat control and where to
maintain or create suitable tree habitat. “In situations
where landowners still needed to remove vegetation even
after bats were discovered, we could use a variety of
methods to encourage the bats to transfer to a new location
before trees were removed.” People interested in
borrowing the equipment should contact EW biosecurity
officer Ben Paris on 0800 800 401. More information about
Project Echo is available online at
http://wwwew.govt.nz/projectecho . A bat sighting form is
available on this website. Picture credit: Crown
Copyright: Department of ConservationTe Papa Atawhai (August
1973), Photographer: J L. Kendrick ends
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MEDIA RELEASE
21 May 2010
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