Evolution 2016: Mammals

July 2, 2016 • 10:30 am

by Greg Mayer

I spent June 17-22 in Austin, Texas, for Evolution 2016, the annual joint meeting of the Society for the Study of Evolution, the American Society of Naturalists, and the Society of Systematic Biology, which is the premier annual gathering of evolutionary biologists from around the world. I hope to make a few posts about the goings on, and we’ll start with some natural history.

On the day I arrived I met up with my friend and colleague Steve Orzack, and we headed out to Pedernales Falls State Park, about an hour west of Austin, to do some birding and herping prior to the official kickoff of the meeting that evening. Also keeping an eye out for mammals, I noticed a sign mentioning “rock squirrels”, showing a black headed squirrel, and recalling how variable fox squirrels are, I wondered if this might be the local variety of fox squirrels. We soon came across a squirrel, which, however, was a rather interesting Eastern gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis).

Eastern gray squirrel at Pedernales Falls State Park, Johnson City, Texas, 17 June 2016
Eastern gray squirrel at Pedernales Falls State Park, Johnson City, Texas, 17 June 2016

In the northern United States, gray squirrels are typically gray above and white below, while fox squirrels are a slightly different shade of gray above and fulvous below. Very rarely a gray squirrel may be fulvous below, in which case the definitive character to look for is that gray squirrels have a white frosting or “halo” on their tails (the tips of the outer tail hairs being white). The squirrel above caught our attention because while gray above, it’s clearly ochraceous buff below, so I thought it might be a fox squirrel. We kept it under observation, and it soon showed its true colors.

Eastern gray squirrel at Pedernales Falls State Park, Johnson City, Texas, 17 June 2016.
Eastern gray squirrel at Pedernales Falls State Park, Johnson City, Texas, 17 June 2016.

Obligingly raising its tail while stopping to drink out of small puddles and pools in the spring-fed muddy track along which we walked, it revealed its gray squirrel-defining frosting on its tail, while also clearly showing it was reddish below.

I’ve never seen gray squirrels in the north drink like this, and it may reflect the scarcity of water sources in the dry scrublands of Texas. This squirrel was also of interest because the park is in Blanco County, and according to Texas Tech, Blanco County is just outside the range of the gray squirrel, so this would be a new county record. (The rock squirrel of Pedernales Falls turns out to be a rather bushy-tailed, black-headed ground squirrel, Spermophilus variegatus, but we did not see any).

The reddish ventral coloration was not a peculiarity of this individual, for the urban squirrels of Austin were also gray squirrels with ochraceous buff venters. This guy was hanging out at one of the bars on Rainey Street.

Eastern gray squirrel on Rainey Street, Austin, Texas, 19 June 2016.
Eastern gray squirrel on Rainey Street, Austin, Texas, 19 June 2016.

This one was in the parkland strip along Lady Bird Lake (actually an impounded strip of the Colorado River) just west of Rainey Street. The ochraceous buff venter is clearly visible.

Eastern gray squirrel,Austin, Texas, 21 June 2016.
Eastern gray squirrel, Austin, Texas, 21 June 2016.

This particular squirrel was first spotted with a mixed flock of great-tailed grackles, white-winged doves, and rock doves. Try spotting all four species in the picture below

Mixed feeding flock of rock doves, white-winged doves, great-tailed grackles, and an eastern gray squirrel, Austin, Texas, 21 June 2016. Can you spot all the species?
Mixed feeding flock of rock doves, white-winged doves, great-tailed grackles, and an eastern gray squirrel, Austin, Texas, 21 June 2016. Can you spot all the species?

Austin’s most famous mammals are the Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) that roost under the Congress Avenue Bridge, and emerge by the millions (or so I am told) each evening. I went out twice to see them, once from below the bridge, and once from the sidewalk above; they came out about 9 PM. Both times large crowds gathered both above and below, and many vessels, including tour boats, gathered on the lake below the bridge. Attempts to photograph them were unsuccessful with my limited camera, but you can see them briefly in the video; listen for the murmur of the bats in the background behind the voices. The red light is a search light used by one of the tour boats, and I tried to follow this light to catch the bats on the video.

On the last day of the meetings, I walked under the bridge to get to the concluding Super Social, and found this dead bat below the bridge. You can clearly see its ‘free tail’ (i.e. the tail is not completely contained within the membrane of the uropatagium).

Mexican free-tailed bat, Austin, Texas, 21 June 2016.
Mexican free-tailed bat, Austin, Texas, 21 June 2016.

The deposits of bat-feces rich sediments (bat guano) below bat roosts (especially if in caves) are often important sources of fossils of bats and associated creatures; there’s a ‘rain’ of dead bats into this sediment. But with a lake and sidewalk below, this cute fellow is unlikely to be fossilized.

Mexican free-tailed bat, Austin, Texas, 21 June 2016.
Mexican free-tailed bat, Austin, Texas, 21 June 2016.

The pièce de résistance of the mammals of Austin for me was a new species and family of mammals for my life list: I spotted a coypu (Myocastor coypus) swimming down Waller Creek in the heart of downtown Austin, right behind Iron Works BBQ. The coypu (or nutria) is an invasive species, originally brought to the U.S. from South America. They look like large muskrats, but do not have a laterally compressed tail. I was looking for the tail, which I could not see clearly, but once I looked at my pictures and video I could easily see the distinctive, diagnostic whitish snout of the coypu.

Bats can be squee

April 11, 2013 • 12:08 pm

by Greg Mayer

Bats are usually some shade of brown, gray, or black, but some are all white, some have facial masks, and some even have yellow spots. But the most distinctively patterned bat I’ve ever seen is the one making the rounds on the interwebs this week, Niumbaha superba, the skunk bat.

Niumbaha superba (DeeAnn Reeder).
Niumbaha superba (DeeAnn Reeder).

It also has large white markings on the throat and flanks (more pix here). I just made up the name “skunk bat”, but you can see why I did. @WorldofZoology likened it to a badger, but since it’s native to central Africa, it’s probably best called the ratel bat (the ratel being a black and white African and southwest Asian carnivore).

The occasion of this striking bat making the rounds is that DeeAnn Reeder of Bucknell University and her colleagues have described a new genus to accommodate it. The species was described in 1939, but had been placed in the genus Glauconycteris. Reeder and her colleagues got a new specimen from South Sudan, and based on data from this specimen and 3 others (the species is known from only five specimens), concluded it should be placed in a new genus. The diagnosis is on the basis of the pattern and various skull characters, including larger size.

Skulls of Niumbaha and two species of Glauconycteris.
Skulls of Niumbaha and two species of Glauconycteris.

There are other strikingly patterned bats; here are several proboscis bats, Rhynchonycteris naso, photographed north of Fortuna, Costa Rica, by a colleague last year. It’s hard to judge size, but I think these are Greater White-lined Bats, Saccopteryx bilineatus; any chiropterologists out there, please weigh in with your opinion. (Corrected ID provided by alert reader Batdan.)

Proboscis bats, Rhynchonycteris naso, Fortuna Costa Rica, 3.i.2012.
Proboscis bats, Rhynchnycteris naso, north of Fortuna, Costa Rica, 3.i.2012.

 

h/t Matthew Cobb

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Reeder, D, K.M. Helgen, M. Vodzak, D. Lunde, and I. Ejotre. 2013. A new genus for a rare African vespertilionid bat: insights from South Sudan. ZooKeys 285: 89-115. (pdf) (I should add that the word “insights” here is totally unnecessary, and should never have gotten past the editors, and “from South Sudan” is misleading, as the species occurs west to the Ivory Coast.)