Northern long-eared bats found and breeding on SC's coastal plain

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Five Northern long-eared bats have been captured in two new counties on South Carolina’s coastal plain. Evidence also shows evidence of a breeding population in Charleston and Berkeley counties. Historically, this federally threatened species was known in South Carolina to exist only in the Upstate, but were discovered in fall 2016 on the Coastal Plain in Beaufort County. Ecological Solutions Inc. senior ecologist Dottie Brown reported to the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR) the capture of five Northern long-eared bats as part of a bat research project being conducted in Francis Marion National Forest. The capture included two juveniles (one female, one male) and three adults (one female, two males). They were captured mid-June through early July near a stream corridor. “With the presence of a lactating female and two juveniles, there’s no doubt they are reproducing here in the summer,” said Brown. “These may be the first documented active summer roosts for Northern long-eared bats on any coastal plain.” Brown and her team fitted the bats with radio transmitters and tracked them to a daytime roost each day. Although the main maternity roosts have dispersed at this point in the season, multiple bats were documented leaving juvenile roosts during emergence surveys. Northern long-eared bats used to be commonly found in mature forests and large tree cavities before their populations declined. However, opportunistic selection of roost-sites within a wide range of tree size and species has also been seen. “We were excited to hear Northern long-eared bats had been found on our coast last fall, but weren’t sure if they were migrating or part of a potential year-round population,” said SCDNR wildlife biologist Jennifer Kindel. Kindel, along with an SCDNR intern and volunteers, is conducting netting surveys for Northern long-eared bats on the coast and in the Upstate this summer. They recently completed surveys at Victoria Bluff and Tom Yawkey Wildlife Center Heritage Preserves, capturing 73 individuals of six different species, but no Northern long-eared bats. “However, knowing Northern long-eared bats breed on our coast and could be using uncommon roost sites has huge implications for management and the survival of this threatened species," she said. Before populations of Northern long-eared bats began plummeting in recent years largely due to White-nose Syndrome (a disease that’s killed over 6 million bats of seven different species in North America thus far), Northern long-eared bats were usually found in mountain forests. More research is needed to understand what this could mean for the species, but it could be positive news in relation to WNS. The fungus that causes WNS attacks bats while they’re hibernating, so if populations of this species are active on South Carolina’s warm, semi-tropical coast during winter, it could potentially reduce their contact and mortality from this devastating disease.