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Little brown bat

The little brown bat or little brown myotis[3] (Myotis lucifugus)[1] is an endangered species of mouse-eared microbat found in North America. It has a small body size and glossy brown fur. It is similar in appearance to several other mouse-eared bats, including the Indiana bat, northern long-eared bat, and Arizona myotis, to which it is closely related. Despite its name, the little brown bat is not closely related to the big brown bat, which belongs to a different genus.

Little brown bat
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Chiroptera
Family: Vespertilionidae
Genus: Myotis
Species:
M. lucifugus
Binomial name
Myotis lucifugus
(Le Conte, 1831)
Subspecies
  • Myotis lucifugus pernox
  • Myotis lucifugus lucifugus
  • Myotis lucifugus alascensis
  • Myotis lucifugus carissima
  • Myotis lucifugus relictus
Distribution of all little brown bat subspecies: M. l. lucifugus (red), M. l. pernox (green), M. l. alascensis (blue), M. l. carissima (yellow), M. l. relictus (gray)[2]
Synonyms
  • Vespertilio lucifugus Le Conte, 1831

Its mating system is polygynandrous, or promiscuous, and females give birth to one offspring annually. The offspring, called pups, are quickly weaned and reach adult size in some dimensions by three weeks old. The little brown bat has a mean lifespan of 6.5 years, though one individual in the wild reached 34 years old. It is nocturnal, foraging for its insect prey at night and roosting in hollow trees or buildings during the day, among less common roost types. It navigates and locates prey with echolocation.

It has few natural predators, but may be killed by raptors such as owls, as well as terrestrial predators such as raccoons. Other sources of mortality include diseases such as rabies and white-nose syndrome. White-nose syndrome has been a significant cause of mortality since 2006, killing over one million little brown bats by 2011. In the Northeastern United States, population loss has been extreme, with surveyed hibernacula (caves used for hibernation) averaging a population loss of 90%.

Humans frequently encounter the little brown bat due to its habit of roosting in buildings. Colonies in buildings are often considered pests because of the production of waste or the concern of rabies transmission. Little brown bats rarely test positive for rabies, however. Some people attempt to attract little brown bats to their property, but not their houses, by installing bat houses.

Taxonomy edit

Relationships of Nearctic Myotis species[4]

The little brown bat was described as a new species in 1831 by American naturalist John Eatton Le Conte. It was initially in the genus Vespertilio, with a binomial of Vespertilio lucifugus,[5] before it was re-categorized as belonging to the Myotis genus.[6] "Myotis" is a Neo-Latin construction, from the Greek "muós (meaning "mouse") and "oûs" (meaning ear), literally translating to "mouse-eared".[7] "Lucifugus" is from Latin "lux" (meaning "light") and "fugere" (meaning "to shun"),[8] literally translating to "light-shunning".[9] The holotype had possibly been collected in Georgia near the Le Conte Plantation near Riceboro,[2] but this has been disputed because the initial record lacked detail on where the specimen was collected.[10]

Within its family, the Vespertilionidae (vesper bats), the little brown bat is a member of the subfamily Myotinae, which contains only the mouse-eared bats of genus Myotis.[6] Based on a 2007 study using mitochondrial and nuclear DNA, it is part of a Nearctic clade of mouse-eared bats. Its sister taxon is the Arizona myotis, M. occultus.[4]

As of 2005, five subspecies of the little brown bat are recognized: M. l. lucifugus, M. l. alascensis, M. l. carissima, M. l. pernox, and M. l. relictus.[11] Formerly, the Arizona myotis and southeastern myotis (M. austroriparius) were also considered subspecies (M. l. occultus and M. l. austroriparius),[2] but both are now recognized as full species.[12][11][13] In a 2018 study by Morales and Carstens, they concluded that the five subspecies are independent, paraphyletic lineages, meaning that grouping them together excludes other lineages with the same common ancestor, and therefore each warrant specific status.[14]

Results of one study suggested that the little brown bat can hybridize with Yuma myotis, M. yumanensis.[15] The two species occur in the same area in much of the Western United States, as well as southern British Columbia. The two species are morphologically different throughout most of the range, but in some regions, individuals have been documented that are intermediate in appearance between the two. However, a 1983 study by Herd and Fenton found no morphological, genetic, or ecological evidence to support the notion that the two species hybridize.[16]

Anatomy and physiology edit

External characteristics edit

 
Illustration of the little brown bat

The little brown bat is a small species, with individuals weighing 5.5–12.5 g (0.19–0.44 oz) with a total body length of 8.0–9.5 cm (3.1–3.7 in). Individuals have the lowest weight in the spring as they emerge from hibernation. It has a forearm length of 36–40 mm (1.4–1.6 in) and a wingspan of 22.2–26.9 cm (8.7–10.6 in).[17] It is a sexually dimorphic species, with females larger than males on average.[2] A variety of fur colors is possible, with pelage ranging from pale tan or reddish to dark brown. Its belly fur is a lighter color than its back fur.[17] Its fur is glossy in appearance, though less so on its belly.[2] A variety of pigmentation disorders have been documented in this species, including albinism (total lack of pigment), leucism (partial lack of pigment), and melanism (over-pigmentation).[18]

Head and teeth edit

 
Face of the little brown bat

It is a diphyodont mammal, meaning that it has two sets of teeth during its lifetime—milk teeth and adult teeth. The dental formula of the milk teeth is 2.1.2.03.1.2.0 for a total of 22 teeth, while that of the adult teeth is 2.1.3.33.1.3.3 for a total of 38 teeth. Newborns ("pups") are born with 20 milk teeth which becomes 22 when the final upper premolars emerge. Pups begin losing milk teeth once they have reached a body length of 55–60 mm (2.2–2.4 in); total loss of milk teeth and emergence of adult teeth is usually complete by the time a juvenile is 80 mm (3.1 in) long.[19]

It has a relatively short snout and a gently sloped forehead. It lacks a sagittal crest, which can be used to distinguish it from the Arizona myotis.[2] Its skull length is 14–16 mm (0.55–0.63 in).[20] The braincase appears nearly circular though somewhat flattened when viewed from the back. Its ears are 11.0–15.5 mm (0.43–0.61 in) long, while the tragi, or cartilaginous flaps that project in front of the ear openings, are 7.0–9.0 mm (0.28–0.35 in) long. The tragi are blunt at the tips and considered of medium length for a mouse-eared bat.[2]

Senses edit

The little brown bat is dichromatic and its eyesight is likely sensitive to ultraviolet and red light, based on a genetic analysis that discovered that the genes SWS1 and M/LWS were present and functional. Its ability to see ultraviolet light may be useful in capturing insects, as 80% of nocturnal moths' wings reflect UV light. It is unclear if or how seeing red light is advantageous for this species.[21] It is adapted to see best in low-light conditions. It lacks eyeshine.[2]

The little brown bat lacks a vomeronasal organ.[2] Relative to frugivorous bat species such as the Jamaican fruit bat, it has small eyes and a reduced olfactory epithelium.[22] Instead, it has a more sophisticated system of echolocation, suggesting that reliance on echolocation decreases the need for orientation via sight or smell.[22]

Physiology edit

 
Little brown bat during winter hibernation

In fall through spring, the little brown bat enters torpor, a state of decreased physiological activity, daily. Torpor saves energy for the bat when ambient temperatures are below 39 °F (4 °C) throughout the year and 32 °F (0 °C) in the winter; instead of expending energy to maintain a constant body temperature, it allows its body to cool and physiological activity to slow. While in torpor, its heart rate drops from up to 210 beats per minute to as few as 8 beats per minute. The exception to this rule is females at the end of pregnancy, which no longer have the ability to thermoregulate, and therefore must roost in warm places. During daily roosting, it can cope with high levels of water loss of up to 25%.[2]

In the winter time, it enters a prolonged state of torpor known as hibernation. To conserve energy, it limits how frequently it arouses from torpor, with individuals existing in uninterrupted torpor for up to 90 days. Arousal is the most energetically costly phase of torpor, which is why individuals do so infrequently. Despite the energy-saving mechanism of hibernation, individuals lose a quarter of their pre-hibernation body mass during the winter.[2]

Similar species edit

The little brown bat can be confused with the Indiana bat (M. sodalis) in appearance. The two can be differentiated by the little brown bat's lack of a keeled calcar—the cartilaginous spur on its uropatagium (the flight membrane between its hind legs). While it does have a calcar, that of the little brown bat is not nearly as pronounced. Additionally, the little brown bat can be distinguished by the presence of hairs on its toes and feet that extend beyond the length of the digits.[2] The northern long-eared bat (M. septentrionalis), another similar species, can be distinguished by its much longer ears, and tragi that are long and sharply pointed.[17]

Biology and ecology edit

Reproduction and life cycle edit

 
Recently born little brown myotis in maternity colony within Yellowstone National Park

The little brown bat has a promiscuous mating structure, meaning that individual bats of both sexes mate with multiple partners.[23] It is a seasonal breeder, with mating taking place in the fall before the annual hibernation.[17] As a seasonal breeder, males do not produce sperm year-round; instead, spermatogenesis occurs May through August each year.[2] Throughout the spring and summer, males and females roost separately. In the fall, however, individuals of both sexes will congregate in the same roost in a behavior known as "swarming".[24] Like several other bat species, males of this species exhibit homosexual behaviors, with male bats mating indiscriminately with torpid, roosting bats, regardless of sex.[25]

Although copulation occurs in the fall, fertilization does not occur until the spring due to sperm storage.[17] Gestation proceeds for 50–60 days following fertilization. The litter size is one individual.[2] At birth, pups weigh approximately 2.2 g (0.078 oz) and have a forearm length less than 17.2 mm (0.68 in).[26] While they have a small absolute mass, they are enormous relative to their mothers, weighing up to 30% of her postpartum body weight at birth.[27] Pups' eyes and ears are closed at first, but open within a few hours of birth. They exhibit rapid growth; at around three weeks old, the young start flying, begin the weaning process, and are of a similar size to adults in forearm length but not weight. The young are totally weaned by 26 days old.[27] Females may become sexually mature in the first year of life.[2] Males become sexually mature in their second year.[7]

It is a very long-lived species relative to its body size. In the wild, individuals have been documented living up to 34 years.[28] The average lifespan, however, is around 6.5 years. Males and females have high annual survival rates (probability of surviving another year), though survival rates vary by sex and region. One colony documented in Ontario had a male survival rate of 81.6% and a female survival rate of 70.8%; a colony in southern Indiana had survival rates of 77.1% and 85.7% for males and females, respectively.[29]

Social behavior edit

 
A mixed colony of little brown and Indiana bats in Ohio

The little brown bat is a colonial species, with hibernating colonies consisting of up to 183,500 individuals, though the average colony size is little more than 9,000. Historically, individuals within these colonies were highly aggregated and densely clustered together, though the disease white-nose syndrome is making solitary hibernation more common.[30]

During the spring and summer, maternity colonies of almost all female individuals form.[2] These colonies usually consist of several hundred bats.[31] Outside of these maternity colonies, adult males and non-reproductive females will roost by themselves or in small aggregations. Maternity colonies begin to break apart in late summer.[2]

Diet and foraging edit

The little brown bat is nocturnal, resting during the day and foraging at night. Individuals typically emerge from their roosts at dusk, foraging for 1.5–3 hours before stopping to roost. A second foraging bout usually occurs later in the night, ending at dawn.[32]

Little brown bat take off and flight

Based on documenting one individual flying in a wind tunnel, it flies at approximately 5.5 km/h (3.4 mph); this increased to 8.9 km/h (5.5 mph) when flying over the surface of water.[33]Home range size is variable; in one study of 22 females in Canada, pregnant females had an average home range of 30.1 hectares (74 acres) and lactating females had an average of 17.6 hectares (43 acres).[34]

It produces calls that are high intensity frequency modulated (FM) and that last from less than one millisecond (ms) to about 5 ms and have a sweep rate of 80–40 kHz, with most of their energy at 45 kHz.[35] Individuals emit approximately 20 calls per second when in flight.[2][35]

It consumes a variety of arthropod species, including insects and spiders. Prey species include beetles, flies, mayflies, true bugs, ants, moths, lacewings, stoneflies, and caddisflies.[36] It also consumes mosquitoes, with one study documenting that, across twelve colonies in Wisconsin, 71.9% of all little brown bat guano (feces) samples contained mosquito DNA.[37]

During late pregnancy, when energetic demands are high, females consume around 5.5 g (0.19 oz) of insects nightly, or 1.3 g (0.046 oz) of insects per hour of foraging. With an average body mass of 9.0 g (0.32 oz), that means that pregnant females consume 61% of their body weight nightly. Energetic demands during lactation are even higher, though, with females consuming 6.7 g (0.24 oz) of insects nightly, or 1.7 g (0.060 oz) of insects per hour of foraging. Because lactating females have an average mass of 7.9 g (0.28 oz), this means that they consume nearly 85% of their body weight nightly. As the pup grows, lactation requires more and more energy; at the predicted lactation peak of 18 days old, a female would have to consume 9.9 g (0.35 oz) of insects per night, or 125% of her own weight.[27]

An often-mentioned statement is that "bats can eat 1000 mosquitoes per hour."[37][38][39] While the little brown bat does consume mosquitoes and has high energetic needs, the study that is the basis for this claim was an experiment in which individuals were put into rooms full of either mosquitoes or fruit flies.[37][38] For a duration up to 31 minutes, they captured an average of 1.5–5.7 mosquitoes per minute. The individual most efficient at catching fruit flies caught an average of 14.8 per minute for 15 minutes.[40] Extrapolating these numbers results in conclusions that it can eat approximately 340 mosquitoes per hour, or 890 fruit flies. However, there is no assurance that individuals forage with such high efficiencies for long periods of time, or that prey is dense enough in natural settings to allow capture rates observed in enclosed areas.[38]

Predation and disease edit

 
An example of a Spinturnix bat mite, which specialize on bat wings

The little brown bat likely has few predators. Known predators include owls such as the eastern screech owl, northern saw-whet owl, and the great horned owl.[41] Raccoons are also opportunistic predators of the little brown bat, picking individuals off the cave walls of their hibernacula (caves used for hibernation) or eating individuals that have fallen to the cave floor.[42]

The presence of helminth parasites in the gastrointestinal tract of the little brown bat is most common in the spring and fall and least common in the summer. Digenetic trematodes are the most common of these parasites, with the more common of these species including Ototrema schildti and Plagiorchis vespertilionis.[43] The little brown bat is also affected by ectoparasites (external parasites), including bat fleas such as Myodopsylla insignis, chiggers like Leptotrombidium myotis, and the bat mites Spinturnix americanus.[44] When parasitizing a female bat, bat mites synchronize their reproductive cycle with that of their host, with their own reproduction tied to the host's pregnancy hormones. Lactating females have a higher intensity of parasitization by mites, which may promote vertical transmission—the transfer of mites to the bat's offspring.[45]

The little brown bat is affected by the rabies virus—specifically, the strain associated with this species is known as MlV1. However, it is susceptible to other strains of the virus, including those of the big brown bat and the silver-haired bat, which is most lethal to humans. The rabies virus can be present in an individual's saliva, meaning that it can be spread through bites, 12–18 days before the individual begins showing symptoms. Individuals do not always develop rabies after exposure, though. In one study, no little brown bats developed rabies after subcutaneous exposure to the MlV1 strain.[46] Some individuals in the wild have antibodies for the rabies virus.[47]

 
Scanning electron microscope image (false-color) of P. destructans on the muzzle of a little brown bat

The little brown bat is also susceptible to the disease white-nose syndrome, which is caused by the fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans.[48] The disease affects individuals when they are hibernating, which is when their body temperatures are within the ideal growth range of P. destructans, 1–15 °C (34–59 °F).[49] Pseudogymnoascus destructans is the first known pathogen that kills a mammal host during its torpor.[50] Mortality from white-nose syndrome begins to manifest 120 days after hibernation begins, and mortality peaks 180 days after bats enter hibernacula.[51] The growth of P. destructans on bats erodes the skin of their wing and tail membranes, muzzles, and ears. White-nose syndrome causes affected bats to burn through their energy reserves twice as fast as uninfected individuals. In addition to visible fungus growth on the nose, ears, and wings, white-nose syndrome results in higher carbon dioxide levels in the blood, causing acidosis, and hyperkalemia (elevated blood potassium). Arousal from torpor becomes more frequent, and water loss increases due increased respiration rate in an attempt to remove excess carbon dioxide from the blood.[52] The premature loss of fat reserves during hibernation results in starvation.[50]

Survivors of white-nose syndrome have longer bouts of torpor and lower body temperatures during torpor than individuals that die.[50] Some individuals are more likely to survive based on their genetics, which predisposes them to remain in torpor longer and have larger fat reserves.[53] Little brown bats are most affected by white-nose syndrome when they exhibit social, grouping behavior when hibernating, as P. destructans is transmitted by direct contact. In hibernacula where bats exhibit more solitary behavior, colonies are more prone to avoid infections of white-nose syndrome. In some colonies where grouping behavior was common before exposure to white-nose syndrome, bats now hibernate in a more solitary fashion. Before white-nose syndrome, only 1.16% of little brown bats hibernated singly; after white-nose syndrome, the percentage grew to 44.5%.[30]

Range and habitat edit

 
A barn in Massachusetts that is the site of a little brown bat maternity colony

The little brown bat lives throughout much of North America.[2] In the north, its range extends as far west as Alaska and across much of Canada to Labrador. In the south, its range extends to Southern California and across the northern parts of Arizona and New Mexico.[1] Historically, the largest known aggregations of this species occurred in the karstic regions of the Eastern United States.[48]

Roosting habitat edit

The little brown bat roosts in sheltered places during the day. These roosts can include human structures or natural structures such as tree hollows, wood piles, rocky outcrops, or, occasionally, caves.[54][2] Species of trees used for roosting include quaking aspen, balsam poplar, oak, and maple.[55][56][17] It prefers roosts that are warm and dark.[2] For maternity colonies, females prefer roosts that are 23.3–34.4 °C (73.9–93.9 °F).[17]

Hibernation habitat edit

 
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska

The little brown bat hibernates in caves or old mines. Females migrate up to hundreds of kilometers from their summer ranges to reach these hibernacula. It prefers hibernacula in which the relative humidity is greater than 90% and ambient temperatures are above the freezing point.[2] Preferred hibernacula also maintain a constant temperature throughout the winter.[17]

Foraging habitat edit

The little brown bat forages along the edges of vegetated habitat.[55] It also forages along the edges of bodies of water or streams.[2] In one study in the Canadian province of Alberta, its foraging activity was significantly higher in old-growth forest than would be expected based on its relative availability.[55]

Conservation edit

 
Little brown bat with white-nose syndrome

As of 2021, the little brown bat is evaluated as an endangered species by the IUCN, a dramatic change from 2008 when it was designated as the lowest conservation priority, least concern.[1] Until recently, the species was regarded as one of the most common bats in North America.[57] However, a serious threat to the species has emerged in the form of a fungus-caused disease known as white-nose syndrome.[58] It was one of the first bat species documented with the disease, which now affects at least seven hibernating bat species in the United States and Canada.[48] From 2006 to 2011, over one million little brown bats died from the disease in the Northeastern United States, with winter hibernacula populations declining up to 99%.[58] As of 2017, hibernacula counts for little brown bats in the Northeast had declined by an average of 90%.[59]

White-nose syndrome first appeared in New York in 2006; it has steadily diffused from eastern New York, though, until recently, remaining east of the Rocky Mountains. In March 2016, white-nose syndrome was detected on a little brown bat in King County, Washington, representing a 1,300 mi (2,100 km) jump from the previous westernmost extent of the disease in any bat species.[60]

 
P. destructans growing on the wing of a little brown bat

In 2010, Frick et al. predicted a 99% chance of local extinction of little brown bats by the year 2026. They also predicted that the pre-white-nose syndrome population of 6.5 million individuals could be reduced to as few as 65,000 (1%) via the disease outbreak.[61] Despite heavy declines, the species has avoided extinction in the Northeast through the persistence of small, localized populations. While the mortality rate of the disease is very high, some individuals that are exposed do survive.[59]

In 2010, Kunz and Reichard published a report arguing that the precipitous decline of the little brown bat justified its emergency listing as a federally endangered species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.[62] However, it is not federally listed as threatened or endangered as of 2018, though several U.S. states list it as endangered (Connecticut,[63] Maine,[64] Massachusetts,[65] New Hampshire,[66] Pennsylvania,[67] Vermont,[68] Virginia[69]), threatened (Tennessee,[70] Wisconsin[17]), or of Special Concern (Michigan,[71] Ohio[72]).

The little brown bat was listed as an endangered species by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada in February 2012 after an emergency assessment. The emergency designation as endangered was confirmed in November 2013.[73]

Relationship to people edit

 
Bat guano in an attic

Little brown bats commonly occupy human structures. Females will situate maternity colonies within buildings.[74] This small body size of this species can make it challenging to prevent individuals from entering a structure, as they can take advantage of gaps or holes as small as 3.8 cm (1.5 in) × 0.64 cm (0.25 in). Once inside a building, a colony of little brown bats can disturb human inhabitants with their vocalizations and production of guano and urine. Large accumulations of guano can provide a growth medium for fungi, including the species that causes histoplasmosis. Concerns about humans becoming affected by bat ectoparasites such as ticks, fleas, or bat bugs are generally unfounded, as parasites that feed on bats are often specific to bats and die without them.[75]

 
A bat house in New Hampshire

Because they are often found in proximity to humans, the little brown bat and the not-closely related big brown bat are the two bat species most frequently submitted for rabies testing in the United States.[46] Little brown bats infrequently test positive for the rabies virus; of the 586 individuals submitted for testing across the United States in 2015, the most recent data available as of 2018, 16 (2.7%) tested positive for the virus.[76]

Little brown bats are a species that will use bat houses for their roosts.[77] Landowners will purchase or construct bat houses and install them, hoping to attract bats for various reasons. Some install bat houses in an attempt to negate the effects of removing a colony from a human structure ("rehoming" them into a more acceptable space). While this can be effective for other species, there is not evidence to suggest that this is effective for little brown bats,[74] though it has been shown that little brown bats will choose to occupy artificial bat boxes installed at the sites of destroyed buildings that once housed colonies.[78] Others are attempting to help bats out of concern for them due to the effects of white-nose syndrome.[79] Bat houses are also installed in an attempt to control the bats' insect prey such as mosquitoes or taxa that harm crops.[80]

Little brown bats are vulnerable near moving vehicles on roads, either foraging or crossing. Bats can easily be pulled into the slipstreams of faster moving vehicles. When little brown bats cross roads, they approach the road using canopy tree cover and avoid crossing where there is no cover. When the cover is lower, bats cross roads lower.[81]

Since 2020, the little brown bat has been the official state mammal of Washington, D.C.

References edit

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little, brown, little, brown, little, brown, myotis, myotis, lucifugus, endangered, species, mouse, eared, microbat, found, north, america, small, body, size, glossy, brown, similar, appearance, several, other, mouse, eared, bats, including, indiana, northern,. The little brown bat or little brown myotis 3 Myotis lucifugus 1 is an endangered species of mouse eared microbat found in North America It has a small body size and glossy brown fur It is similar in appearance to several other mouse eared bats including the Indiana bat northern long eared bat and Arizona myotis to which it is closely related Despite its name the little brown bat is not closely related to the big brown bat which belongs to a different genus Little brown batConservation statusEndangered IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ChiropteraFamily VespertilionidaeGenus MyotisSpecies M lucifugusBinomial nameMyotis lucifugus Le Conte 1831 SubspeciesMyotis lucifugus pernox Myotis lucifugus lucifugus Myotis lucifugus alascensis Myotis lucifugus carissima Myotis lucifugus relictusDistribution of all little brown bat subspecies M l lucifugus red M l pernox green M l alascensis blue M l carissima yellow M l relictus gray 2 SynonymsVespertilio lucifugus Le Conte 1831Its mating system is polygynandrous or promiscuous and females give birth to one offspring annually The offspring called pups are quickly weaned and reach adult size in some dimensions by three weeks old The little brown bat has a mean lifespan of 6 5 years though one individual in the wild reached 34 years old It is nocturnal foraging for its insect prey at night and roosting in hollow trees or buildings during the day among less common roost types It navigates and locates prey with echolocation It has few natural predators but may be killed by raptors such as owls as well as terrestrial predators such as raccoons Other sources of mortality include diseases such as rabies and white nose syndrome White nose syndrome has been a significant cause of mortality since 2006 killing over one million little brown bats by 2011 In the Northeastern United States population loss has been extreme with surveyed hibernacula caves used for hibernation averaging a population loss of 90 Humans frequently encounter the little brown bat due to its habit of roosting in buildings Colonies in buildings are often considered pests because of the production of waste or the concern of rabies transmission Little brown bats rarely test positive for rabies however Some people attempt to attract little brown bats to their property but not their houses by installing bat houses Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Anatomy and physiology 2 1 External characteristics 2 2 Head and teeth 2 3 Senses 2 4 Physiology 2 5 Similar species 3 Biology and ecology 3 1 Reproduction and life cycle 3 2 Social behavior 3 3 Diet and foraging 3 4 Predation and disease 4 Range and habitat 4 1 Roosting habitat 4 2 Hibernation habitat 4 3 Foraging habitat 5 Conservation 6 Relationship to people 7 ReferencesTaxonomy editOld World spp Nearctic spp M californicusM leibiiM septentrionalisM auriculusM sodalisM volansM lucifugusM occultusM thysanodesM evotisM keeniiRelationships of Nearctic Myotis species 4 The little brown bat was described as a new species in 1831 by American naturalist John Eatton Le Conte It was initially in the genus Vespertilio with a binomial of Vespertilio lucifugus 5 before it was re categorized as belonging to the Myotis genus 6 Myotis is a Neo Latin construction from the Greek muos meaning mouse and ous meaning ear literally translating to mouse eared 7 Lucifugus is from Latin lux meaning light and fugere meaning to shun 8 literally translating to light shunning 9 The holotype had possibly been collected in Georgia near the Le Conte Plantation near Riceboro 2 but this has been disputed because the initial record lacked detail on where the specimen was collected 10 Within its family the Vespertilionidae vesper bats the little brown bat is a member of the subfamily Myotinae which contains only the mouse eared bats of genus Myotis 6 Based on a 2007 study using mitochondrial and nuclear DNA it is part of a Nearctic clade of mouse eared bats Its sister taxon is the Arizona myotis M occultus 4 As of 2005 five subspecies of the little brown bat are recognized M l lucifugus M l alascensis M l carissima M l pernox and M l relictus 11 Formerly the Arizona myotis and southeastern myotis M austroriparius were also considered subspecies M l occultus and M l austroriparius 2 but both are now recognized as full species 12 11 13 In a 2018 study by Morales and Carstens they concluded that the five subspecies are independent paraphyletic lineages meaning that grouping them together excludes other lineages with the same common ancestor and therefore each warrant specific status 14 Results of one study suggested that the little brown bat can hybridize with Yuma myotis M yumanensis 15 The two species occur in the same area in much of the Western United States as well as southern British Columbia The two species are morphologically different throughout most of the range but in some regions individuals have been documented that are intermediate in appearance between the two However a 1983 study by Herd and Fenton found no morphological genetic or ecological evidence to support the notion that the two species hybridize 16 Anatomy and physiology editExternal characteristics edit nbsp Illustration of the little brown batThe little brown bat is a small species with individuals weighing 5 5 12 5 g 0 19 0 44 oz with a total body length of 8 0 9 5 cm 3 1 3 7 in Individuals have the lowest weight in the spring as they emerge from hibernation It has a forearm length of 36 40 mm 1 4 1 6 in and a wingspan of 22 2 26 9 cm 8 7 10 6 in 17 It is a sexually dimorphic species with females larger than males on average 2 A variety of fur colors is possible with pelage ranging from pale tan or reddish to dark brown Its belly fur is a lighter color than its back fur 17 Its fur is glossy in appearance though less so on its belly 2 A variety of pigmentation disorders have been documented in this species including albinism total lack of pigment leucism partial lack of pigment and melanism over pigmentation 18 Head and teeth edit nbsp Face of the little brown batIt is a diphyodont mammal meaning that it has two sets of teeth during its lifetime milk teeth and adult teeth The dental formula of the milk teeth is 2 1 2 0 3 1 2 0 for a total of 22 teeth while that of the adult teeth is 2 1 3 3 3 1 3 3 for a total of 38 teeth Newborns pups are born with 20 milk teeth which becomes 22 when the final upper premolars emerge Pups begin losing milk teeth once they have reached a body length of 55 60 mm 2 2 2 4 in total loss of milk teeth and emergence of adult teeth is usually complete by the time a juvenile is 80 mm 3 1 in long 19 It has a relatively short snout and a gently sloped forehead It lacks a sagittal crest which can be used to distinguish it from the Arizona myotis 2 Its skull length is 14 16 mm 0 55 0 63 in 20 The braincase appears nearly circular though somewhat flattened when viewed from the back Its ears are 11 0 15 5 mm 0 43 0 61 in long while the tragi or cartilaginous flaps that project in front of the ear openings are 7 0 9 0 mm 0 28 0 35 in long The tragi are blunt at the tips and considered of medium length for a mouse eared bat 2 Senses edit The little brown bat is dichromatic and its eyesight is likely sensitive to ultraviolet and red light based on a genetic analysis that discovered that the genes SWS1 and M LWS were present and functional Its ability to see ultraviolet light may be useful in capturing insects as 80 of nocturnal moths wings reflect UV light It is unclear if or how seeing red light is advantageous for this species 21 It is adapted to see best in low light conditions It lacks eyeshine 2 The little brown bat lacks a vomeronasal organ 2 Relative to frugivorous bat species such as the Jamaican fruit bat it has small eyes and a reduced olfactory epithelium 22 Instead it has a more sophisticated system of echolocation suggesting that reliance on echolocation decreases the need for orientation via sight or smell 22 Physiology edit nbsp Little brown bat during winter hibernationIn fall through spring the little brown bat enters torpor a state of decreased physiological activity daily Torpor saves energy for the bat when ambient temperatures are below 39 F 4 C throughout the year and 32 F 0 C in the winter instead of expending energy to maintain a constant body temperature it allows its body to cool and physiological activity to slow While in torpor its heart rate drops from up to 210 beats per minute to as few as 8 beats per minute The exception to this rule is females at the end of pregnancy which no longer have the ability to thermoregulate and therefore must roost in warm places During daily roosting it can cope with high levels of water loss of up to 25 2 In the winter time it enters a prolonged state of torpor known as hibernation To conserve energy it limits how frequently it arouses from torpor with individuals existing in uninterrupted torpor for up to 90 days Arousal is the most energetically costly phase of torpor which is why individuals do so infrequently Despite the energy saving mechanism of hibernation individuals lose a quarter of their pre hibernation body mass during the winter 2 Similar species edit The little brown bat can be confused with the Indiana bat M sodalis in appearance The two can be differentiated by the little brown bat s lack of a keeled calcar the cartilaginous spur on its uropatagium the flight membrane between its hind legs While it does have a calcar that of the little brown bat is not nearly as pronounced Additionally the little brown bat can be distinguished by the presence of hairs on its toes and feet that extend beyond the length of the digits 2 The northern long eared bat M septentrionalis another similar species can be distinguished by its much longer ears and tragi that are long and sharply pointed 17 Biology and ecology editReproduction and life cycle edit nbsp Recently born little brown myotis in maternity colony within Yellowstone National ParkThe little brown bat has a promiscuous mating structure meaning that individual bats of both sexes mate with multiple partners 23 It is a seasonal breeder with mating taking place in the fall before the annual hibernation 17 As a seasonal breeder males do not produce sperm year round instead spermatogenesis occurs May through August each year 2 Throughout the spring and summer males and females roost separately In the fall however individuals of both sexes will congregate in the same roost in a behavior known as swarming 24 Like several other bat species males of this species exhibit homosexual behaviors with male bats mating indiscriminately with torpid roosting bats regardless of sex 25 Although copulation occurs in the fall fertilization does not occur until the spring due to sperm storage 17 Gestation proceeds for 50 60 days following fertilization The litter size is one individual 2 At birth pups weigh approximately 2 2 g 0 078 oz and have a forearm length less than 17 2 mm 0 68 in 26 While they have a small absolute mass they are enormous relative to their mothers weighing up to 30 of her postpartum body weight at birth 27 Pups eyes and ears are closed at first but open within a few hours of birth They exhibit rapid growth at around three weeks old the young start flying begin the weaning process and are of a similar size to adults in forearm length but not weight The young are totally weaned by 26 days old 27 Females may become sexually mature in the first year of life 2 Males become sexually mature in their second year 7 It is a very long lived species relative to its body size In the wild individuals have been documented living up to 34 years 28 The average lifespan however is around 6 5 years Males and females have high annual survival rates probability of surviving another year though survival rates vary by sex and region One colony documented in Ontario had a male survival rate of 81 6 and a female survival rate of 70 8 a colony in southern Indiana had survival rates of 77 1 and 85 7 for males and females respectively 29 Social behavior edit nbsp A mixed colony of little brown and Indiana bats in OhioThe little brown bat is a colonial species with hibernating colonies consisting of up to 183 500 individuals though the average colony size is little more than 9 000 Historically individuals within these colonies were highly aggregated and densely clustered together though the disease white nose syndrome is making solitary hibernation more common 30 During the spring and summer maternity colonies of almost all female individuals form 2 These colonies usually consist of several hundred bats 31 Outside of these maternity colonies adult males and non reproductive females will roost by themselves or in small aggregations Maternity colonies begin to break apart in late summer 2 Diet and foraging edit The little brown bat is nocturnal resting during the day and foraging at night Individuals typically emerge from their roosts at dusk foraging for 1 5 3 hours before stopping to roost A second foraging bout usually occurs later in the night ending at dawn 32 source source source source Little brown bat take off and flightBased on documenting one individual flying in a wind tunnel it flies at approximately 5 5 km h 3 4 mph this increased to 8 9 km h 5 5 mph when flying over the surface of water 33 Home range size is variable in one study of 22 females in Canada pregnant females had an average home range of 30 1 hectares 74 acres and lactating females had an average of 17 6 hectares 43 acres 34 It produces calls that are high intensity frequency modulated FM and that last from less than one millisecond ms to about 5 ms and have a sweep rate of 80 40 kHz with most of their energy at 45 kHz 35 Individuals emit approximately 20 calls per second when in flight 2 35 It consumes a variety of arthropod species including insects and spiders Prey species include beetles flies mayflies true bugs ants moths lacewings stoneflies and caddisflies 36 It also consumes mosquitoes with one study documenting that across twelve colonies in Wisconsin 71 9 of all little brown bat guano feces samples contained mosquito DNA 37 During late pregnancy when energetic demands are high females consume around 5 5 g 0 19 oz of insects nightly or 1 3 g 0 046 oz of insects per hour of foraging With an average body mass of 9 0 g 0 32 oz that means that pregnant females consume 61 of their body weight nightly Energetic demands during lactation are even higher though with females consuming 6 7 g 0 24 oz of insects nightly or 1 7 g 0 060 oz of insects per hour of foraging Because lactating females have an average mass of 7 9 g 0 28 oz this means that they consume nearly 85 of their body weight nightly As the pup grows lactation requires more and more energy at the predicted lactation peak of 18 days old a female would have to consume 9 9 g 0 35 oz of insects per night or 125 of her own weight 27 An often mentioned statement is that bats can eat 1000 mosquitoes per hour 37 38 39 While the little brown bat does consume mosquitoes and has high energetic needs the study that is the basis for this claim was an experiment in which individuals were put into rooms full of either mosquitoes or fruit flies 37 38 For a duration up to 31 minutes they captured an average of 1 5 5 7 mosquitoes per minute The individual most efficient at catching fruit flies caught an average of 14 8 per minute for 15 minutes 40 Extrapolating these numbers results in conclusions that it can eat approximately 340 mosquitoes per hour or 890 fruit flies However there is no assurance that individuals forage with such high efficiencies for long periods of time or that prey is dense enough in natural settings to allow capture rates observed in enclosed areas 38 Predation and disease edit nbsp An example of a Spinturnix bat mite which specialize on bat wingsThe little brown bat likely has few predators Known predators include owls such as the eastern screech owl northern saw whet owl and the great horned owl 41 Raccoons are also opportunistic predators of the little brown bat picking individuals off the cave walls of their hibernacula caves used for hibernation or eating individuals that have fallen to the cave floor 42 The presence of helminth parasites in the gastrointestinal tract of the little brown bat is most common in the spring and fall and least common in the summer Digenetic trematodes are the most common of these parasites with the more common of these species including Ototrema schildti and Plagiorchis vespertilionis 43 The little brown bat is also affected by ectoparasites external parasites including bat fleas such as Myodopsylla insignis chiggers like Leptotrombidium myotis and the bat mites Spinturnix americanus 44 When parasitizing a female bat bat mites synchronize their reproductive cycle with that of their host with their own reproduction tied to the host s pregnancy hormones Lactating females have a higher intensity of parasitization by mites which may promote vertical transmission the transfer of mites to the bat s offspring 45 The little brown bat is affected by the rabies virus specifically the strain associated with this species is known as MlV1 However it is susceptible to other strains of the virus including those of the big brown bat and the silver haired bat which is most lethal to humans The rabies virus can be present in an individual s saliva meaning that it can be spread through bites 12 18 days before the individual begins showing symptoms Individuals do not always develop rabies after exposure though In one study no little brown bats developed rabies after subcutaneous exposure to the MlV1 strain 46 Some individuals in the wild have antibodies for the rabies virus 47 nbsp Scanning electron microscope image false color of P destructans on the muzzle of a little brown batThe little brown bat is also susceptible to the disease white nose syndrome which is caused by the fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans 48 The disease affects individuals when they are hibernating which is when their body temperatures are within the ideal growth range of P destructans 1 15 C 34 59 F 49 Pseudogymnoascus destructans is the first known pathogen that kills a mammal host during its torpor 50 Mortality from white nose syndrome begins to manifest 120 days after hibernation begins and mortality peaks 180 days after bats enter hibernacula 51 The growth of P destructans on bats erodes the skin of their wing and tail membranes muzzles and ears White nose syndrome causes affected bats to burn through their energy reserves twice as fast as uninfected individuals In addition to visible fungus growth on the nose ears and wings white nose syndrome results in higher carbon dioxide levels in the blood causing acidosis and hyperkalemia elevated blood potassium Arousal from torpor becomes more frequent and water loss increases due increased respiration rate in an attempt to remove excess carbon dioxide from the blood 52 The premature loss of fat reserves during hibernation results in starvation 50 Survivors of white nose syndrome have longer bouts of torpor and lower body temperatures during torpor than individuals that die 50 Some individuals are more likely to survive based on their genetics which predisposes them to remain in torpor longer and have larger fat reserves 53 Little brown bats are most affected by white nose syndrome when they exhibit social grouping behavior when hibernating as P destructans is transmitted by direct contact In hibernacula where bats exhibit more solitary behavior colonies are more prone to avoid infections of white nose syndrome In some colonies where grouping behavior was common before exposure to white nose syndrome bats now hibernate in a more solitary fashion Before white nose syndrome only 1 16 of little brown bats hibernated singly after white nose syndrome the percentage grew to 44 5 30 Range and habitat edit nbsp A barn in Massachusetts that is the site of a little brown bat maternity colonyThe little brown bat lives throughout much of North America 2 In the north its range extends as far west as Alaska and across much of Canada to Labrador In the south its range extends to Southern California and across the northern parts of Arizona and New Mexico 1 Historically the largest known aggregations of this species occurred in the karstic regions of the Eastern United States 48 Roosting habitat edit The little brown bat roosts in sheltered places during the day These roosts can include human structures or natural structures such as tree hollows wood piles rocky outcrops or occasionally caves 54 2 Species of trees used for roosting include quaking aspen balsam poplar oak and maple 55 56 17 It prefers roosts that are warm and dark 2 For maternity colonies females prefer roosts that are 23 3 34 4 C 73 9 93 9 F 17 Hibernation habitat edit nbsp Kenai National Wildlife Refuge AlaskaThe little brown bat hibernates in caves or old mines Females migrate up to hundreds of kilometers from their summer ranges to reach these hibernacula It prefers hibernacula in which the relative humidity is greater than 90 and ambient temperatures are above the freezing point 2 Preferred hibernacula also maintain a constant temperature throughout the winter 17 Foraging habitat edit The little brown bat forages along the edges of vegetated habitat 55 It also forages along the edges of bodies of water or streams 2 In one study in the Canadian province of Alberta its foraging activity was significantly higher in old growth forest than would be expected based on its relative availability 55 Conservation edit nbsp Little brown bat with white nose syndromeAs of 2021 the little brown bat is evaluated as an endangered species by the IUCN a dramatic change from 2008 when it was designated as the lowest conservation priority least concern 1 Until recently the species was regarded as one of the most common bats in North America 57 However a serious threat to the species has emerged in the form of a fungus caused disease known as white nose syndrome 58 It was one of the first bat species documented with the disease which now affects at least seven hibernating bat species in the United States and Canada 48 From 2006 to 2011 over one million little brown bats died from the disease in the Northeastern United States with winter hibernacula populations declining up to 99 58 As of 2017 hibernacula counts for little brown bats in the Northeast had declined by an average of 90 59 White nose syndrome first appeared in New York in 2006 it has steadily diffused from eastern New York though until recently remaining east of the Rocky Mountains In March 2016 white nose syndrome was detected on a little brown bat in King County Washington representing a 1 300 mi 2 100 km jump from the previous westernmost extent of the disease in any bat species 60 nbsp P destructans growing on the wing of a little brown batIn 2010 Frick et al predicted a 99 chance of local extinction of little brown bats by the year 2026 They also predicted that the pre white nose syndrome population of 6 5 million individuals could be reduced to as few as 65 000 1 via the disease outbreak 61 Despite heavy declines the species has avoided extinction in the Northeast through the persistence of small localized populations While the mortality rate of the disease is very high some individuals that are exposed do survive 59 In 2010 Kunz and Reichard published a report arguing that the precipitous decline of the little brown bat justified its emergency listing as a federally endangered species under the U S Endangered Species Act 62 However it is not federally listed as threatened or endangered as of 2018 though several U S states list it as endangered Connecticut 63 Maine 64 Massachusetts 65 New Hampshire 66 Pennsylvania 67 Vermont 68 Virginia 69 threatened Tennessee 70 Wisconsin 17 or of Special Concern Michigan 71 Ohio 72 The little brown bat was listed as an endangered species by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada in February 2012 after an emergency assessment The emergency designation as endangered was confirmed in November 2013 73 Relationship to people edit nbsp Bat guano in an atticLittle brown bats commonly occupy human structures Females will situate maternity colonies within buildings 74 This small body size of this species can make it challenging to prevent individuals from entering a structure as they can take advantage of gaps or holes as small as 3 8 cm 1 5 in 0 64 cm 0 25 in Once inside a building a colony of little brown bats can disturb human inhabitants with their vocalizations and production of guano and urine Large accumulations of guano can provide a growth medium for fungi including the species that causes histoplasmosis Concerns about humans becoming affected by bat ectoparasites such as ticks fleas or bat bugs are generally unfounded as parasites that feed on bats are often specific to bats and die without them 75 nbsp A bat house in New HampshireBecause they are often found in proximity to humans the little brown bat and the not closely related big brown bat are the two bat species most frequently submitted for rabies testing in the United States 46 Little brown bats infrequently test positive for the rabies virus of the 586 individuals submitted for testing across the United States in 2015 the most recent data available as of 2018 16 2 7 tested positive for the virus 76 Little brown bats are a species that will use bat houses for their roosts 77 Landowners will purchase or construct bat houses and install them hoping to attract bats for various reasons Some install bat houses in an attempt to negate the effects of removing a colony from a human structure rehoming them into a more acceptable space While this can be effective for other species there is not evidence to suggest that this is effective for little brown bats 74 though it has been shown that little brown bats will choose to occupy artificial bat boxes installed at the sites of destroyed buildings that once housed colonies 78 Others are attempting to help bats out of concern for them due to the effects of white nose syndrome 79 Bat houses are also installed in an attempt to control the bats insect prey such as mosquitoes or taxa that harm crops 80 Little brown bats are vulnerable near moving vehicles on roads either foraging or crossing Bats can easily be pulled into the slipstreams of faster moving vehicles When little brown bats cross roads they approach the road using canopy tree cover and avoid crossing where there is no cover When the cover is lower bats cross roads lower 81 Since 2020 the little brown bat has been the official state mammal of Washington D C References edit a b c d Solari S 2021 amended version of 2018 assessment Myotis lucifugus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2021 e T14176A208031565 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2021 3 RLTS T14176A208031565 en Retrieved 17 December 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Fenton M Brock Barclay Robert M R 1980 Myotis lucifugus Mammalian Species 142 1 8 doi 10 2307 3503792 JSTOR 3503792 S2CID 253932645 Little Brown Myotis Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry Ontario a b Stadelmann B Lin L K Kunz T H Ruedi M 2007 Molecular phylogeny of New World Myotis Chiroptera Vespertilionidae inferred from mitochondrial and nuclear DNA genes Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 43 1 32 48 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2006 06 019 PMID 17049280 Cuvier Georges Baird Spencer Fullerton Goode G Brown Latreille P A Laurillard Charles Leopold Mason Otis Tufton McElfresh Henry McMurtrie Henry Schoolcraft Henry Rowe 1831 The animal kingdom arranged in conformity with its organization by the Baron Cuvier the Crustacea Arachnides and Insecta by P A Latreille translated from the French with notes and additions by H M Murtrie in four volumes with plates Vol 1 G amp C amp H Carvill p 431 doi 10 5962 bhl title 41463 a b Hoofer Steven R Bussche Ronald A Van Den 2003 Molecular Phylogenetics of the Chiropteran Family Vespertilionidae Acta Chiropterologica 5 1 63 doi 10 3161 001 005 s101 hdl 11244 44678 S2CID 83806884 a b Schwartz Charles Walsh Schwartz Elizabeth Reeder 2001 The Wild Mammals of Missouri illustrated ed University of Missouri Press p 69 ISBN 9780826213594 Stangl F B Christiansen P G Galbraith E J 1993 Abbreviated guide to pronunciation and etymology of scientific names for North American land mammals north of Mexico PDF Occasional Papers the Museum Texas Tech University 154 7 Archived from the original PDF on 1 August 2019 Lewis Charlton 1890 lucĭfŭgus An Elementary Latin Dictionary Perseus Project Retrieved 14 September 2021 Davis Wayne H Rippy Charles L 1968 Distribution of Myotis lucifugus and Myotis austroriparius in the Southeastern United States Journal of Mammalogy 49 1 113 117 doi 10 2307 1377733 JSTOR 1377733 a b Simmons N B 2005 Order Chiroptera In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 510 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Piaggio Antoinette J Valdez Ernest W Bogan Michael A Spicer Greg S 2002 Systematics of Myotis occultus Chiroptera Vespertilionidae Inferred from Sequences of Two Mitochondrial Genes Journal of Mammalogy 83 2 386 395 doi 10 1644 1545 1542 2002 083 lt 0386 SOMOCV gt 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 46363786 Jones Clyde Manning Richard W 1989 Myotis austroriparius Mammalian Species 332 1 3 doi 10 2307 3504306 JSTOR 3504306 S2CID 253996734 Morales Ariadna E Carstens Bryan C 2018 Evidence that Myotis lucifugus Subspecies are Five Nonsister Species Despite Gene Flow Systematic Biology 67 5 756 769 doi 10 1093 sysbio syy010 PMID 29462459 S2CID 3418392 Parkinson Aida 1979 Morphologic Variation and Hybridization in Myotis yumanensis sociabilis and Myotis lucifugus carissima Journal of Mammalogy 60 3 489 504 doi 10 2307 1380090 JSTOR 1380090 Herd Robert M Fenton M Brock 1983 An electrophoretic morphological and ecological investigation of a putative hybrid zone between Myotis lucifugus and Myotis yumanensis Chiroptera Vespertilionidae Canadian Journal of Zoology 61 9 2029 2050 doi 10 1139 z83 268 a b c d e f g h i Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources 2013 Wisconsin Little Brown Bat Species Guidance PDF Report Madison Wisconsin Bureau of Natural Heritage Conservation Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources PUB ER 705 Buchanan G Dale 1985 Comments on Frequency of Melanism in Myotis lucifugus Journal of Mammalogy 66 1 178 doi 10 2307 1380979 JSTOR 1380979 Fenton M Brock 1970 The deciduous dentition and its replacement in Myotis lucifugus Chiroptera Vespertilionidae Canadian Journal of Zoology 48 4 817 820 doi 10 1139 z70 143 Little Brown Myotis Myotis lucifugus Montana Field Guides Montana Natural Heritage Program and Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks Retrieved 3 November 2018 Zhao Huabin Xu Dong Zhou Yingying Flanders Jon Zhang Shuyi 2009 Evolution of opsin genes reveals a functional role of vision in the echolocating little brown bat Myotis lucifugus Biochemical Systematics and Ecology 37 3 154 161 doi 10 1016 j bse 2009 03 001 a b Bhatnagar Kunwar P 1975 Olfaction in Artibeus jamaicensis and Myotis lucifugus in the context of vision and echolocation Experientia 31 7 856 doi 10 1007 BF01938504 PMID 1140332 S2CID 20671364 Thomas Donald W Fenton M Brock Barclay Robert M R 1979 Social Behavior of the Little Brown Bat Myotis lucifugus I Mating Behavior Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 6 2 129 136 doi 10 1007 BF00292559 S2CID 27019675 Burns Lynne E Frasier Timothy R Broders Hugh G 2014 Genetic connectivity among swarming sites in the wide ranging and recently declining little brown bat Myotis lucifugus Ecology and Evolution 4 21 4130 4149 doi 10 1002 ece3 1266 PMC 4242565 PMID 25505539 Riccucci M 2010 Same sex sexual behaviour in bats Hystrix The Italian Journal of Mammalogy 22 1 doi 10 4404 Hystrix 22 1 4478 Kunz T H Anthony E L P 1982 Age Estimation and Post Natal Growth in the Bat Myotis lucifugus Journal of Mammalogy 63 1 23 32 doi 10 2307 1380667 JSTOR 1380667 a b c Kurta Allen Bell Gary P Nagy Kenneth A Kunz Thomas H 1989 Energetics of Pregnancy and Lactation in Freeranging Little Brown Bats Myotis lucifugus Physiological Zoology 62 3 804 818 doi 10 1086 physzool 62 3 30157928 S2CID 86895612 Brunet Rossinni Anja K 2004 Reduced free radical production and extreme longevity in the little brown bat Myotis lucifugus versus two non flying mammals Mechanisms of Ageing and Development 125 1 11 20 doi 10 1016 j mad 2003 09 003 PMID 14706233 S2CID 11019415 Keen R Hitchcock H B 1980 Survival and Longevity of the Little Brown Bat Myotis lucifugus in Southeastern Ontario Journal of Mammalogy 61 1 1 7 doi 10 2307 1379951 JSTOR 1379951 a b Langwig Kate E Frick Winifred F Bried Jason T Hicks Alan C Kunz Thomas H Marm Kilpatrick A 2012 Sociality density dependence and microclimates determine the persistence of populations suffering from a novel fungal disease white nose syndrome PDF Ecology Letters 15 9 1050 1057 doi 10 1111 j 1461 0248 2012 01829 x PMID 22747672 Burnett C D August P V 1981 Time and energy budgets for dayroosting in a maternity colony of Myotis lucifugus Journal of Mammalogy 62 4 758 766 doi 10 2307 1380597 JSTOR 1380597 Anthony E L P Stack M H Kunz T H 1981 Night roosting and the nocturnal time budget of the little brown bat Myotis lucifugus Effects of reproductive status prey density and environmental conditions Oecologia 51 2 151 156 Bibcode 1981Oecol 51 151A doi 10 1007 BF00540593 PMID 28310074 S2CID 22435996 Aldridge H D J N 1988 Flight kinematics and energetics in the little brown bat Myotis lucifugus Chiroptera Vespertilionidae with reference to the influence of ground effect Journal of Zoology 216 3 507 517 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1988 tb02447 x Henry Mickael Thomas Donald W Vaudry Real Carrier Michel 2002 Foraging Distances and Home Range of Pregnant and Lactating Little Brown Bats Myotis lucifugus Journal of Mammalogy 83 3 767 774 doi 10 1644 1545 1542 2002 083 lt 0767 FDAHRO gt 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 84447754 a b Fenton M Brock Bell Gary P 1979 Echolocation and feeding behaviour in four species of Myotis Chiroptera Canadian Journal of Zoology 57 6 1271 1277 doi 10 1139 z79 163 Clare E L Barber B R Sweeney B W Hebert P D N Fenton M B 2011 Eating local Influences of habitat on the diet of little brown bats Myotis lucifugus Molecular Ecology 20 8 1772 1780 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294X 2011 05040 x PMID 21366747 S2CID 3894216 a b c Wray Amy K Jusino Michelle A Banik Mark T Palmer Jonathan M Kaarakka Heather White J Paul Lindner Daniel L Gratton Claudio Peery M Zachariah 2018 Incidence and taxonomic richness of mosquitoes in the diets of little brown and big brown bats Journal of Mammalogy 99 3 668 674 doi 10 1093 jmammal gyy044 a b c Can bats really eat 1000 mosquitoes per hour A closer look at pest control claims AL com Advance Local Media LLC 30 August 2016 Retrieved 27 November 2018 Tuttle M D Kiser M Kiser S 2005 The bat house builder s handbook University of Texas Press p 4 ISBN 9780974237916 Griffin Donald R Webster Frederic A Michael Charles R 1960 The echolocation of flying insects by bats Animal Behaviour 8 3 4 141 154 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 588 6881 doi 10 1016 0003 3472 60 90022 1 Jung Thomas S Lausen Cori L Talerico Jennifer M Slough Brian G 2011 Opportunistic Predation of a Little Brown Bat Myotis lucifugus by a Great Horned Owl Bubo virginianus in Southern Yukon Northwestern Naturalist 92 69 72 doi 10 1898 10 06 1 S2CID 86181796 McAlpine Donald F Vanderwolf Karen J Forbes Graham J Malloch David 2011 Consumption of Bats Myotis spp by Raccoons Procyon lotor During an Outbreak of White Nose Syndrome in New Brunswick Canada Implications for Estimates of Bat Mortality The Canadian Field Naturalist 125 3 257 doi 10 22621 cfn v125i3 1231 Coggins James R Tedesco John L Rupprecht Charles E 1982 Seasonal changes and overwintering of parasites in the bat Myotis lucifugus Le Conte in a Wisconsin hibernaculum American Midland Naturalist 107 2 305 315 doi 10 2307 2425381 JSTOR 2425381 Poissant J A Broders H G 2008 Ectoparasite prevalence in Myotis lucifugus and M septentrionalis Chiroptera Vespertilionidae during fall migration at Hayes Cave Nova Scotia Northeastern Naturalist 15 4 515 522 doi 10 1656 1092 6194 15 4 515 S2CID 59152757 Czenze Zenon J Broders Hugh G 2011 Ectoparasite Community Structure of Two Bats Myotis lucifugus and M septentrionalis from the Maritimes of Canada Journal of Parasitology Research 2011 1 9 doi 10 1155 2011 341535 PMC 3199115 PMID 22028951 a b Davis A D Jarvis J A Pouliott C E Morgan S M D Rudd R J 2013 Susceptibility and Pathogenesis of Little Brown Bats Myotis lucifugus to Heterologous and Homologous Rabies Viruses Journal of Virology 87 16 9008 9015 doi 10 1128 JVI 03554 12 PMC 3754046 PMID 23741002 Trimarchi C V Debbie J G 1977 Naturally Occurring Rabies Virus and Neutralizing Antibody in Two Species of Insectivorous Bats of New York State Journal of Wildlife Diseases 13 4 366 369 doi 10 7589 0090 3558 13 4 366 PMID 24228955 S2CID 11485247 a b c Vonhof Maarten J Russell Amy L Miller Butterworth Cassandra M 2015 Range Wide Genetic Analysis of Little Brown Bat Myotis lucifugus Populations Estimating the Risk of Spread of White Nose Syndrome PLOS ONE 10 7 e0128713 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1028713V doi 10 1371 journal pone 0128713 PMC 4495924 PMID 26154307 Meteyer Carol Uphoff Valent Mick Kashmer Jackie Buckles Elizabeth L Lorch Jeffrey M Blehert David S Lollar Amanda Berndt Douglas Wheeler Emily White C Leann Ballmann Anne E 2011 Recovery of Little Brown Bats Myotis lucifugus from Natural Infection with Geomyces destructans White Nose Syndrome Journal of Wildlife Diseases 47 3 618 626 doi 10 7589 0090 3558 47 3 618 PMID 21719826 S2CID 43256232 a b c Lilley Thomas Mikael Johnson Joseph Samuel Ruokolainen Lasse Rogers Elisabeth Jeannine Wilson Cali Ann Schell Spencer Mead Field Kenneth Alan Reeder Deeann Marie 2016 White nose syndrome survivors do not exhibit frequent arousals associated with Pseudogymnoascus destructans infection Frontiers in Zoology 13 12 doi 10 1186 s12983 016 0143 3 PMC 4778317 PMID 26949407 Lorch Jeffrey M Meteyer Carol U Behr Melissa J Boyles Justin G Cryan Paul M Hicks Alan C Ballmann Anne E Coleman Jeremy T H Redell David N Reeder DeeAnn M 2011 Experimental infection of bats with Geomyces destructans causes white nose syndrome PDF Nature 480 7377 376 8 Bibcode 2011Natur 480 376L doi 10 1038 nature10590 PMID 22031324 S2CID 4381156 Verant Michelle L Meteyer Carol U Speakman John R Cryan Paul M Lorch Jeffrey M Blehert David S 2014 White nose syndrome initiates a cascade of physiologic disturbances in the hibernating bat host BMC Physiology 14 10 doi 10 1186 s12899 014 0010 4 PMC 4278231 PMID 25487871 Auteri Giorgia G Knowles Lacey L 2020 Decimated little brown bats show potential for adaptive change Scientific Reports 10 1 3023 Bibcode 2020NatSR 10 3023A doi 10 1038 s41598 020 59797 4 PMC 7033193 PMID 32080246 Randall Lea A Jung Thomas S Barclay Robert MR 2014 Roost Site Selection and Movements of Little Brown Myotis Myotis lucifugus in Southwestern Yukon Northwestern Naturalist 95 3 312 317 doi 10 1898 13 02 1 S2CID 85694194 a b c Crampton Lisa H Barclay Robert M R 1998 Selection of Roosting and Foraging Habitat by Bats in Different Aged Aspen Mixedwood Stands Conservation Biology 12 6 1347 1358 doi 10 1111 j 1523 1739 1998 97209 x S2CID 86447942 Olson Cory R Barclay Robert M R 2013 Concurrent changes in group size and roost use by reproductive female little brown bats Myotis lucifugus Canadian Journal of Zoology 91 3 149 155 doi 10 1139 cjz 2012 0267 Miller Butterworth C M Vonhof M J Rosenstern J Turner G G Russell A L 2014 Genetic Structure of Little Brown Bats Myotis lucifugus Corresponds with Spread of White Nose Syndrome among Hibernacula Journal of Heredity 105 3 354 364 doi 10 1093 jhered esu012 PMID 24591103 a b Dzal Y McGuire L P Veselka N Fenton M B 2011 Going going gone The impact of white nose syndrome on the summer activity of the little brown bat Myotis lucifugus Biology Letters 7 3 392 394 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2010 0859 PMC 3097845 PMID 21106570 a b Dobony Christopher A Johnson Joshua B 2018 Observed Resiliency of Little Brown Myotis to Long Term White Nose Syndrome Exposure Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management 9 168 179 doi 10 3996 102017 JFWM 080 White nose Syndrome A Deadly Disease batcon org Bat Conservation International Retrieved 4 November 2018 Frick W F Pollock J F Hicks A C Langwig K E Reynolds D S Turner G G Butchkoski C M Kunz T H 2010 An Emerging Disease Causes Regional Population Collapse of a Common North American Bat Species Science 329 5992 679 682 Bibcode 2010Sci 329 679F doi 10 1126 science 1188594 PMID 20689016 S2CID 43601856 Kunz TH Reichard JD 2010 Status review of the little brown myotis Myotis lucifugus and determination that immediate listing under the Endangered Species Act is scientifically and legally warranted Status Review prepared for US Fish and Wildlife Service PDF Report State of Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Bureau of Natural Resources 2015 Connecticut s Endangered Threatened and Special Concern Species PDF Connecticut gov Myotis lucifugus Little Brown Bat PDF State of Maine 13 January 2016 Natural Heritage amp Endangered Species Program Little Brown Myotis Myotis lucifugus PDF Massachusetts Division of Fisheries amp Wildlife Endangered and Threatened Wildlife of NH New Hampshire Fish and Game New Hampshire Fish and Game Department Retrieved 4 November 2018 Thomas Mary Ann 30 January 2019 3 varieties of bats added to Pa endangered species list TRIB Live Retrieved 1 February 2019 Little brown bat Vermont Fish amp Wildlife Department State of Vermont Retrieved 4 November 2018 Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries Special Status Faunal Species in Virginia PDF Virginia gov Retrieved 4 November 2018 Rules and Regulation for in Need of Management Threatened and Endangered Species PDF Tennessee gov Retrieved 4 November 2018 Michigan s Rare Animals Michigan Natural Features Inventory Michigan State University Retrieved 4 November 2018 Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife July 2018 Ohio s Listed Species PDF Report R0718 COSEWIC 2013 COSEWIC assessment and status report on the Little Brown Myotis Myotis lucifugus Northern Myotis Myotis septentrionalis and Tri colored Bat Perimyotis subflavus in Canada Report Ottawa Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada a b Neilson A Fenton M 1994 Responses of Little Brown Myotis to Exclusion and to Bat Houses Wildlife Society Bulletin 22 1 8 14 JSTOR 3783215 Greenhall Arthur M Frantz Stephen C 1994 Bats The Handbook Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage Birhane Meseret G Cleaton Julie M Monroe Ben P Wadhwa Ashutosh Orciari Lillian A Yager Pamela Blanton Jesse Velasco Villa Andres Petersen Brett W Wallace Ryan M 2017 Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2015 Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 250 10 1117 1130 doi 10 2460 javma 250 10 1117 PMID 28467751 S2CID 41121211 Tuttle Merlin Hensley Donna 1993 Bat Houses The Secrets of Success batcon org Bat Conservation International Retrieved 5 November 2018 Brittingham Margaret C Williams Lisa M 2000 Bat boxes as alternative roosts for displaced bat maternity colonies Wildlife Society Bulletin 28 1 197 207 JSTOR 4617303 How You Can Help White Nose Syndrome Response Team U S Fish and Wildlife Service Department of the Interior Retrieved 5 November 2018 Long Rachael Freeman Simpson Tiffanie Ding Tzung Su Heydon Steve Reil Wilbur 1998 Bats feed on crop pests in Sacramento Valley California Agriculture 52 8 10 doi 10 3733 ca v052n01p8 Christian C Voigt Tigga Kingston ed 2015 Bats in the Anthropocene Conservation of Bats in a Changing World Springer ISBN 9783319252209 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Little brown bat amp oldid 1204649733, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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