Mystacinidae
(vertebrate zoology) A monospecific family of insectivorous bats (Chiroptera) containing the New Zealand short-tailed bat; hindlegs and body are stout, and fur is thick.
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(vertebrate zoology) A monospecific family of insectivorous bats (Chiroptera) containing the New Zealand short-tailed bat; hindlegs and body are stout, and fur is thick.
(Mystacinidae)
Class: Mammalia
Order: Chiroptera
Suborder: Microchiroptera
Family: Mystacinidae
Thumbnail description
New Zealand short-tailed bats are medium-sized, robust bats; they have evolved a suite of unusual characteristics, including a unique wing-folding mechanism, additional spurs below each claw, and robust legs that permit efficient movement along the ground and tree trunks; only bats demonstrated to be omnivorous
Size
Forearm length 1.5–1.8 in (40–48 mm); total length 2.3–3.5 in (60–90 mm); wingspan 11–12.2 in (280–310 mm); ear lengths 0.6–0.7 in (17.5–18.6 mm); weight 0.4–1.2 oz (11–35 g)
Number of genera, species
1 genus; 2 species
Habitat
Native forests and scrub habitats of New Zealand
Conservation status
Extinct: 1 species; Vulnerable: 1 species
Distribution
New Zealand
Evolution and systematics
Mystacinidae has been aligned with several other bat superfamilies, including Vespertilionoidea, Emballonuroidea, and Noctilionoidea. Traditional classifications have primarily aligned Mystacinidae with the vespertilionid family Molossidae. Assessing relationships between Mystacinidae and other bat families with morphology has proven difficult since so many mystacinid morphological features are unique. Recent analyses of molecular evidence, including DNA hybridization, immunology, and mitochondrial DNA sequences, along with systematic analyses of morphological traits, have provided strong evidence that Mystacinidae is a member of the Noctilionoidea, including the bat families Noctilionidae, Mormoopidae, and Phyllostomidae. This finding lends support to the hypothesis that the ancestral lineage leading to Mystacinidae originated in the New World tropics.
Physical characteristics
New Zealand short-tailed bats are robustly built, with stocky bodies and short, stout legs. The feet are broad, short, and are positioned under the body during movement on the ground and in trees, unlike other bats. The feet have grooved soles and needle-sharp claws, which are further modified with denticles, or talons, at the base of each claw and the thumb. These modifications of the legs, feet, and claws make New Zealand short-tailed bats capable of running on the ground, climbing, and burrowing.
The dark brown fur is short, thick, and velvety, with white-tipped hairs that give it a frosted appearance. The head tapers to a slender, truncated muzzle with prominent, oblong nostrils and a set of stiff whiskers. The ears and tragi are long, slender, and pointed. The wing membranes are unique among bats, being thickened and leathery along the body, forearm, and lower leg. The remainder of the wing membrane can be folded under this thickened portion, protecting it during climbing and running. The tail emerges from the dorsal surface of the tail membrane.
The teeth are cuspidate, with chisel-like incisors. The number of teeth is reduced through loss of incisors and premolars to a total of 28 (I1/1 C1/1 P2/2 M3/3). The tongue is extensible and covered with small projections (papillae), and there is a gap between the front incisors.
Distribution
New Zealand short-tailed bats are found only in New Zealand. Both species are thought to have once occurred throughout the islands of New Zealand. Mystacina tuberculata is now restricted to a portion of its former range. Mystacina robusta was restricted to a single locality in recent history and is now presumed extinct, having not been observed since 1965.
Habitat
Both species of Mystacina occupy the moist forests of New Zealand and muttonbird scrub (Olearia sp.) habitats found on certain islands. Roosts are found solely within native, broadleaf forests, although foraging may occur in scrub habitats and along coastlines. Roosts are typically in trees but may also occur in caves, burrows, and houses.
Behavior
Mystacinid bats are unusual for their ability to run, climb, and burrow. They have been described as having rodent-like agility and are frequently seen scurrying along tree branches and the ground. Their robust and modified limbs and feet are clearly adaptations for a more terrestrial lifestyle than is found in most bats, except perhaps vampire bats. They burrow under leaf litter in search of food and excavate their own tunnels and roosts in rotten logs.
They are active primarily at night, emerging from roosts several hours after dusk. Flight is typically slow and low, with bats flying 6.5–9.8 ft (2–3 m) off the ground. Echolocation calls are frequency modulated sweeps with maximum energy between 60 and 65 kHz. They become inactive during cold weather but do not hibernate, as they emerge to forage in winter when the weather is warm.
Feeding ecology and diet
New Zealand short-tailed bats have an unusually broad diet: they are essentially omnivorous, which is unusual among bats. Foods eaten include arthropods taken in flight and from surfaces, nectar, pollen, and fruit. They have also been observed eating nestling and adult birds and chewing meat and fat from muttonbirds killed by humans.
Reproductive biology
These bats reproduce once yearly, giving birth to one young. Births may be synchronized. The season of mating and births seems to vary with latitude. The mating system of these bats is not known.
Conservation status
New Zealand short-tailed bat populations have been negatively affected by introduced species such as rats, stoats, and cats, which prey on them in roosts and while foraging. They are particularly vulnerable because they forage on the ground and may occupy roosts accessible to predators. The introduction of rats to islands occupied by greater New Zealand short-tailed bats is likely to have resulted in their extinction. Destruction of native forests also threatens these bats, as they rely on native trees for roost sites and food.
Significance to humans
If Mystacina robusta is, indeed, extinct, then Mystacina tuberculata is the only surviving member of a unique bat family endemic to New Zealand. These bats represent a unique evolutionary history and are part of the rich cultural and natural heritage of New Zealand. Their nectar-feeding and insecteating habits also make them valuable pollinators of native trees and predators of insect pests.
Species accounts
Lesser New Zealand short-tailed batResources
Books:Daniels, M. J. "Greater Short-tailed Bat." In The Handbook of New Zealand Mammals, edited by Carolyn M. King. Auckland: Oxford University Press, 1995.
Daniels, M. J. "Lesser Short-tailed Bat." In The Handbook of New Zealand Mammals, edited by Carolyn M. King. Auckland: Oxford University Press, 1995.
Hill, John E., and James D. Smith. Bats, A Natural History. London: British Museum of Natural History, 1984.
Koopman, Karl F. "Chiroptera: Systematics." In Handbook of Zoology, Volume VIII, Mammalia, edited by J. Niethammer, H. Schliemann, and D. Starck. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1994.
McKenna, Malcolm C., and Susan K. Bell, eds. Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997.
Nowak, Ronald M. Walker's Bats of the World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994.
Simmons, Nancy B., and Jonathan H. Geisler. "Phylogenetic Relationships of Icaronycteris, Archaeonycteris, Hassianycteris, and Palaeochiropteryx to Extant Bat Lineages, with Comments on the Evolution of Echolocation and Foraging Strategies in Microchiroptera." Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, Number 235. New York: American Museum of Natural History, 1998.
Periodicals:Arkins, A. M., A. P. Winnington, S. Anderson, and M. N. Clout. "Diet and Nectarivorous Foraging Behaviour of the Short-tailed Bat (Mystacina tuberculata)." Journal of Zoology 247 (1999): 183–187.
Hill, J. C., and M. J. Daniel. "Systematics of the New Zealand Short-tailed Bat Mystacina Gray, 1843 (Chiroptera: Mystacinidae)." Bulletin of the British Museum of Natural History, Zoology 48 (1985): 279–300.
Mayer, G. C., J. A. W. Kirsch, J. M. Hutcheon, F. J. Lapointe, and J. Gingras. "On the Valid Name of the Lesser New Zealand Short-tailed Bat (Mammalia: Chiroptera)." Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 112 (1999): 470–490.
Parson, Stuart. "Search-phase Echolocation Calls of the New Zealand Lesser Short-tailed Bat (Mystacina tuberculata) and Long-tailed Bat (Chalinolobus tuberculatus)." Canadian Journal of Zoology 75 (1997): 1487–1494.
Van Den Bussche, Ronald A., and Steven R. Hoofer. "Further Evidence for Inclusion of the New Zealand Short-tailed Bat (Mystacina tuberculata) within Noctilionoidea." Journal of Mammalogy 81 (2000): 865–874.
Van Den Bussche, Ronald A., Steven R. Hoofer, and Nancy B. Simmons. "Phylogenetic Relationships of Mormoopid Bats Using Mitochondrial Gene Sequences and Morphology." Journal of Mammalogy 83 (2002): 40–48.
Webb, P. I., J. A. Sedgeley, and C. F. J. O'Donnell. "Wing Shape in New Zealand Lesser Short-tailed Bats (Mystacina tuberculata)." Journal of Zoology 246 (1998): 462–465.
Worthy, T. H., M. J. Daniel, and J. E. Hill. "An Analysis of Skeletal Size Variation in Mystacina robusta Dwyer, 1962 (Chiroptera: Mystacinidae)." The Royal Society of New Zealand 23 (1996).
[Article by: Tanya Dewey]
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See text |
The New Zealand short-tailed bats are the Mystacinidae family of bats. There is one genus, Mystacina, with two species.
Mystacinidae are the most "un-batlike" family of bats. They spend much of the time on the ground and are unique in having the ability to fold their wings into a leathery membrane when not in use.
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