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Vampire Bats

Heckler

The unspeakable mass
Joined
Jul 16, 2004
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Vampires Prey on Panama
Blood-sucking bats take a bite out of cattlemen's profits, but scientists say the creatures are too valuable to wipe out.

By Chris Kraul, Times Staff Writer


TONOSI, Panama — Cattleman Francisco Oliva was on a roundup — of vampire bats. After a swarm of the blood-slurping creatures divebombed his herd and drank their fill one recent night, he corralled several dozen of them in special contraptions that look like giant badminton nets.

He put each bat in a cage and then brushed a poison called vampirin on their backs before releasing them. Back in the bat roost, the animals would be groomed by as many as 20 other bats, causing their deaths. Or so Oliva hoped.

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"We have to look for answers, because this little animal is very stubborn," Oliva said days after the capture as he surveyed his 300-head herd, most of it bearing fang marks and red stains from the nightly bloodletting. Oliva said he would exterminate every single bat if he could.

"You keep the good and get rid of the bad," the rancher said, philosophic but wearied by the attacks, "and these little devils are terrible."

More than 100 miles away, on an island research station in the middle of the Panama Canal, Stefan Klose begged to differ. He not only stuck up for Desmodus rotundus, the scientific name for the most common vampire bat, but described the animals as boons to humanity. Research involving bats led to the development of sonar and anticoagulant drugs that prevent heart attacks, he pointed out, and scientists are just beginning to understand the creatures.

"I certainly defend vampire bats' right to a place in the ecosystem," said Klose, a young German zoologist who does fieldwork at the Barro Colorado tropical scientific center run by the Smithsonian Institution. Man's irrational reaction to vampires, he said, reflects "our primal fear of being someone else's food object."

Few animals inspire the repugnance and fascination of vampire bats, and perhaps nowhere are opinions more divided than in Panama, which has 120 bat species. Bats are found everywhere in the world except Antarctica, but they thrive in the tropical rain forests that cover much of Panama because of a plenitude of animal and plant foods, abundant shelter and a lack of seasons to inhibit regeneration. In a tropical environment's biodiversity, bats "have more niches to exploit," Klose said.

On one side of the debate over the creatures are farmers such as Oliva faced with an escalating plague, and on the other are scientists who use bats and the scientific breakthroughs they have inspired to promote biodiversity.

"Bats have developed a radar system that can distinguish the tiniest insect in the middle of dense bush in the dead of night," said Todd Capson, a Smithsonian staff scientist who tracks the development of technology derived from tropical flora and fauna. "It's inconceivable there isn't something more to learn from that."

But the benefits of bats are a tough sell here. Sabine Spehn, another German researcher who recently did fieldwork in Panama, said by telephone from the German city of Ulm that her efforts to explain "the nice things about bats" to Panamanians, such as insect control and seed and pollen dispersion, came to naught.

"The response I got was always, 'The only good bat is a dead bat,' " Spehn said.

The antagonism of rancher Oliva is understandable. Here in the remote and hilly southwestern corner of Panama, he and other cattlemen wage a constant battle against a variety of livestock nemeses such as coyotes, crocodiles, ticks, worms and tropical diseases. He has been driven to the edge of desperation by the increasing bat attacks.

Vampire bats have always been present in Panama and their attacks have ebbed and flowed. "But now the bad cycles have become more frequent," said Argis Barrios, president of Panama's National Cattlemen's Assn.

Scientists theorize that the increased attacks on livestock are the result of logging that has flushed the bats out of food-rich forests, and to the growth here in Tonosi of cattle herds, a ready-made and usually stationary food supply for the bats. "The problem is a man-made one," Spehn said.

During April alone, Oliva said, he lost 10 calves to anemia caused by successive bat attacks. He and other cattlemen bemoan the scarcity of the bat-catching nets, which are strictly controlled by the federal government to prevent their being used to capture endangered birds.

Catching vampire bats with the nets and poisoning them is legal. But Japan, which donated the net Oliva used, has stipulated that a veterinarian always be present to save "good," or non-vampire, bats caught in the webbing, and there are just three vets in the entire Tonosi Valley region, which is about a quarter the size of Yosemite National Park.

Non-vampire bats make up the overwhelming majority of the 1,100 known bat species. Even the scariest of bats, the giant flying fox of New Guinea, which has a Dracula-like wingspan of more than 5 feet, feeds only on fruit and insects. There are only three blood-sucking, or vampire, bats.

"The problem is there are many bats, many cattlemen and very few nets," Oliva said as he examined his pockmarked cattle. Several of his surviving calves were anemic — they had a skin-and-bones look and were weak and unsteady on their feet.

Even on nights when none of the herd dies, Oliva estimates, bats consume or cause the loss of 300 pounds of blood from the cattle, or one-fourth the body weight of a mature steer. The attacks also cause the cattle to weaken and become more susceptible to diseases, he said.

Adult vampire bats, which have a wingspan of 8 inches, swoop down by the hundreds over his herd, the rancher said, landing on the ground and then jumping on the animals' legs, bellies or faces to bite them. The bat's saliva contains an anticoagulant that makes blood flow freely.

After an attack on Oliva's herd last month, the bats were so stuffed they could fly only a couple of feet off the ground, he said, enabling him to catch 87 of them in the special nets that encircled his herd.

Farmers like Oliva may curse the vampires' very existence, but researcher Rachel Page, a scientist from the University of Texas at Austin who is conducting acoustic research on bats at the Smithsonian's Panamanian island facility, talks of them with admiration.

Vampire bats, she said, are one of the few animal species that demonstrate "altruistic" behavior. Bats that have been successful in foraging for blood regurgitate it and give it to roost-mates who were unsuccessful in the search for the nightly meal, she said, explaining that the bats must have blood every night or they can die.

Bats' grooming habits — licking one another's backs to remove mites — is another example of their "highly social" behavior, Page said.

It is also a trait that makes them susceptible to poisoning. "Poisoning them this way is effective but not very nice, because it takes a long time for the bats to die," said Spehn, the German researcher.

Klose also confessed to a fondness for the creatures. The scientist said feeding time, when the bats accept bits of banana from his hand, is a "really sweet and peaceful sight. It always reminds me of how close these animals are to us and how incredibly intelligent they are — certainly more exotic and wilder than my neighbor's dog, but no less smart or cuddly. A flying dog with radar would be impressive, but unfortunately the bats got those traits first."

Although only a few bats are vampires, the public generally fears all of the tiny mammals, and for no good reason, Klose said. "The reaction is rooted so deeply in human nature it's hard to get rid of," he said. "The message is, get over it."

Easier said than done, say the cattlemen, who point out that bats can spread rabies. Although areas such as Tonosi have been hit harder than others, the cattlemen's association says 5% of the nation's 1.5 million cattle were attacked last month, the most in memory.

Although attacks on humans are rare, two Tonosi residents, Felipe Sanmaniego and Juvenal Diaz, reported being bitten by bats as they slept this month. Their blood losses weren't serious.

"When they can't find cows, vampires go after horses, pigs, chickens and humans — anything with blood," said David Torralba, a technician with the Tonosi office of the Agriculture Ministry.

Though he sympathizes with the cattlemen, Klose says further study of bats might yield more technological breakthroughs.

"Who would have thought reef sponges could lead to anti-cancer drugs, that the scales of butterfly wings could help bring about better kinds of paint? But they are being studied for it," Klose said. "In fact, very little of what we have invented has been made from scratch. Nature usually provides the template.

"Vampires could hold the key to a problem we want to solve, like AIDS or cancer. But if you destroy them, they are lost for eternity."

Eternity is beyond Oliva's range of vision just now. He has an emaciated-looking herd of cows to deal with.

"We'll take revenge … if we get more nets," he said. "But I have to stick it out. There is nothing else I can do."
 
The bats, which bite and suck the blood of their victims, usually animals, are believed to have killed 38 tribesmen and women – including children – in Venezuela.

It is thought that the bats were carrying rabies, which then infected the members of the remote Warao tribe.

Doctor Charles Rupprecht, chief of the rabies program at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, said that "the history and clinical signs are compatible with rabies".

"Vampire bats are very adaptable," Dr Rupprecht said. "Homo sapiens is a pretty easy meal."

It is believed that the bats were disturbed from their usual habitat by nearby logging or mining activity. The usually feed on sleeping wild and domesticated mammals and birds, hunting in complete darkness.

Researchers from the University of California at Berkeley uncovered the pattern of deaths. At least 38 Warao have died since June 2007, with 16 dying since the beginning of June 2008, according to a report they provided to Venezuelan officials.

All victims died within a week of showing signs of illness. One village, Mukuboina, lost eight of its roughly 80 inhabitants – all of them children.

Venezuelan health officials are investigating the outbreak and plan to distribute mosquito nets to prevent bat bites and send a medical boat to provide treatment.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... agers.html

maximus otter
 
see all this unecessary logging is causing more than just bats out of their homes, with more snake bites being recorded and now vamp bats aswell it should be a warning to slow down.

see this is the thing just like the plague with rats its not actually the animal that causes the disease its what it carries hence rats with fleas and vamp bats with rabies.

as long as they get the nets it should give them some protection but not complete cover, bats ahve been known to get into small places and there is nothing to stop them making holes in the nets
 
More Vampire Bat attacks.

Rabies spread by vampire bats kills fifth child in Peru
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-11395956

Vampire bat captured in Brazil, 2005 Vampire bats feed on the blood of mammals at night

A fifth child has died in Peru in an outbreak of rabies spread by vampire bats, say health officials.

The death in the northern Amazon region brings the total number of people killed in the outbreak to 20.

A local health official said 3,500 people had been bitten by the bloodsucking bats.

He warned the number of deaths could rise because of the costs and difficulties of getting vaccines to the affected areas.

"There are very remote places, whose journey can take up to 15 hours through the jungle rivers," said Fernando Borjas in the regional capital, Chachapoyas.

The dead children, aged between five and 10 years old, were all members of the indigenous Awajun and Wampis communities, living in the north-eastern Peruvian Amazon, close to the border with Ecuador.

Peru's health ministry has sent emergency teams to the region and Mr Borjas said 900 people had already been immunised. But thousands have had no vaccine - some indigenous people were reported to have refused treatment.

Vampire bats usually feed on wildlife or livestock, but are sometimes known to turn to humans for food, particularly in areas where their rainforest habitat has been destroyed.

"These bats feed at night, and since they do not find large animals they bite unprotected people," said Mr Borjas.

Some local people have suggested this latest outbreak of attacks may be linked to the unusually low temperatures in the Peruvian Amazon in recent years.

Rabies is a viral disease which causes inflammation in the brain and is almost always fatal.
 
Vampire bat rabies killed Mexico man in US
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-14513034

Vampire bats are the leading source of rabies in Latin America, health authorities say

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How bloodsuckers find their blood

A migrant farm worker from Mexico who died in 2010 was the first human ever to die in the US of rabies transmitted by vampire bat, health officials say.

The 19-year-old died last August about three weeks after he was bitten on the heel by a vampire bat while sleeping in the Mexican state of Michoacan.

Doctors in the US state of Louisiana, where he went to work on a sugar cane farm after the bite, diagnosed rabies.

He had no known vaccination against the disease, US health officials reported.

According to a report in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly, a publication of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the unnamed worker was bitten on the left heel by the bat on 15 July 2010.

He departed for the US 10 days later, arriving at a sugar cane plantation in Louisiana on 29 July.

Rapid death
The next day he went to hospital, complaining of fatigue, pain in his left shoulder and numbness in his left hand, which he attributed to overwork.

He was transferred to hospital in New Orleans, where his condition deteriorated rapidly until he died on 21 August.

A post-mortem examination showed that he had been infected with a variant of rabies that comes from vampire bats.

The man fell ill only 15 days after being bitten, whereas the median incubation period for rabies in the US is 85 days, the CDC reported.

The man's mother later told health investigators he did not seek medical attention for the initial bite.

"This is the first reported death from a vampire bat rabies virus variant in the United States," the CDC reported.

But the study notes that vampire bats are the leading source of rabies infection in Latin America.

Separately, officials at the CDC are searching for passengers who travelled on a plane from Wisconsin to Atlanta a week ago accompanied by a stowaway bat.

The bat briefly entered the cabin and flew among passengers before escaping, meaning health officials were unaware whether it was carrying rabies or not.
 
This time its a case of vampire bats aid villagers, sort of.

First Indication of People Naturally Protected Against Rabies Found in Remote Amazonian Communities Regularly Exposed to Vampire Bats
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 185110.htm

ScienceDaily (Aug. 1, 2012) — Challenging conventional wisdom that rabies infections are 100 percent fatal unless immediately treated, scientists studying remote populations in the Peruvian Amazon at risk of rabies from vampire bats found 11 percent of those tested showed protection against the disease, with only one person reporting a prior rabies vaccination. Ten percent appear to have survived exposure to the virus without any medical intervention. The findings from investigators at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) were published August 2in the August 2012 issue of the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

"The overwhelming majority of rabies exposures that proceed to infections are fatal. However, our results open the door to the idea that there may be some type of natural resistance or enhanced immune response in certain communities regularly exposed to the disease," said Amy Gilbert with the CDC's National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, who is the paper's lead author. "This means there may be ways to develop effective treatments that can save lives in areas where rabies remains a persistent cause of death."

Rabies experts estimate the disease kills 55,000 people each year in Africa and Asia alone, and appears to be on the rise in China, the former Soviet Republics, southern Africa, and Central and South America. According to the CDC, in the United States, human deaths from rabies have declined over the past century from 100 annually to an average of two per year thanks to an aggressive campaign to vaccinate domestic animals against the disease.

In general, people who believe they may have been exposed to rabies are advised to immediately seek treatment which involves post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) -- a series of injections -- to prevent the exposure from causing an active infection. These preventive treatments, when administered promptly, are 100 percent successful at preventing disease. Scientists have documented only a small number of individual cases, including one last year in California, in which an exposure to rabies proceeded to infection and the victim survived. Most of those survivors still required intensive medical attention, including one case in Wisconsin in which doctors induced a coma, though this approach has not been successful in most subsequent cases.

This CDC study was conducted in collaboration with the Peruvian Ministry of Health as part of a larger project to understand better bat-human interactions and its relation to rabies and emerging diseases that may be transmitted by bats. For their research, scientists traveled to two communities (Truenococha and Santa Marta) in a remote section of the Peruvian Amazon where outbreaks of fatal infections with rabies caused by bites from vampire bats -- the most common "natural reservoir" for the disease in Latin America -- have occurred regularly over the last two decades. They interviewed 92 people, 50 of whom reported previous bat bites. Blood samples were taken from 63 individuals and seven (11 percent) were found to have "rabies virus neutralizing antibodies."

One out of the seven individuals reported receiving a rabies vaccination -- which generates antibodies to the rabies virus -- but there was no evidence that the other six had received anti-rabies vaccine prior to the blood sampling or had sought out any medical attention for a bat bite, evidence that they had harbored the virus itself.

The researchers acknowledged that they could not conclusively determine whether the antibodies were caused by an exposure to the virus that was somehow insufficient to produce disease. But they believe their evidence "suggests that (rabies virus) exposure is not invariably fatal to humans."

Gilbert said non-fatal exposures may happen more often than some think because "unless people have clinical symptoms of the disease they may not go to the hospital or clinic, particularly where access is limited."

"We all still agree that nearly everyone who is found to be experiencing clinical symptoms of rabies dies," Gilbert said. "But we may be missing cases from isolated high-risk areas where people are exposed to rabies virus and, for whatever reason, they don't develop disease."

In the Amazon region where the study was conducted -- the Province Datem del Maranon in the Loreto Department of northern Peru -- vampire bats, which live off of mammalian blood, regularly come out at night and prefer to feed on livestock. But in the absence of those food sources, they are known to seek out a meal from humans. They can use their extremely sharp teeth and the anticoagulant that naturally occurs in their saliva (appropriately referred to as "draculin") to feed on a sleeping person without awakening them. The rabies virus circulates extensively among vampire bat colonies in the region, and when an infected bat feeds, it passes along the virus to its host.

"This type of thorough and persistent scientific rabies investigation lends continued support to the belief that even the most dangerous of infectious diseases may be amenable to treatment," said James W. Kazura, MD noted infectious disease expert and president of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (ASTMH). "Continued investment of resources is essential for us to protect the health and well-being of innocent people whose lives and livelihoods are needlessly threatened by infectious diseases like rabies."

Gilbert and her colleagues hope their findings will prompt further studies in remote, at-risk communities to see if the results are replicated. In an editorial accompanying the study, Rodney E. Willoughby, a pediatric disease specialist at Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, said if it turns out there are distinct populations of people with "complete or relative resistance to rabies," there could be the potential to use whole genome sequencing to help develop new, life-saving treatments for rabies infections.

"Careful, respectful genetic study of these genetically unique populations may provide information on which pathways in human biochemistry and physiology promote resistance to human rabies," he wrote. "Equally important, knowing that there is a continuum of disease, even for infectious diseases like rabies, should push us harder to try for cures when confronted by so-called untreatable infectious diseases…."

Gilbert noted that the study was done as part of a larger public health effort to address a series of rabies outbreaks in the Amazon, where some health officials are now considering conducting pre-emptive vaccination campaigns in areas where risk of rabies is high and availability of medical care low. She said that while her study highlights people who appear to have survived an exposure to the virus, the fact remains that rabies outbreaks in small communities in the region have left tragic results.

"These are very small villages and, when they witness ten people dying from what is a horrible disease, it is incredibly traumatic," Gilbert said. "We want to help raise awareness of the problem and try to develop a more proactive response."

Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Burness Communications, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.
 
Chile's health authorities have warned people to be wary of an increasing number of bats appearing in homes across the country.

The Institute for Public Health said it had been sent 70 bats within the first week of January, three of which tested positive for rabies.

It said that while bats are active in spring and summer, there seemed to be more this January due to a heat wave.

Health officials said their presence in houses was "potentially risky".

There are 11 species of bats in Chile, some of which live very close to humans, the Institute of Health said in a statement [in Spanish] on its website.

In 1996, a seven-year-old boy died in the city of Rancagua after contracting rabies from a bat bite.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-38582197?ocid=socialflow_twitter
 
This article reports that Brazilian vampire bats are adapting to host (bird) shortages by supplementing their diets with human blood. :eek:

Well, That Sucks: Vampire Bats Found Drinking Human Blood

Diphylla ecaudata, also known as the hairy-legged vampire bat, inhabits forests in northeastern Brazil and is one of three species of vampire bats that feed only on blood. It was thought that birds were its sole prey, but dung analysis recently revealed that other types of two-legged animals — humans — were on the bat's bill of fare. ...


http://www.livescience.com/57521-vampire-bats-drink-human-blood.html
 
I thought these verminous little beasties semi-regularly feed on humans and have for some time?

There are 3 recognized species of vampire bats. The common vampire bat typically feeds on wild or domesticated mammals. The other two species have a preference for the blood of birds but can also feed from mammals. All three species are known to feed on humans, but as far as I know none of the three exhibits a preference for humans versus livestock and relatively sizable wild mammals.

I don't know if the common vampire bat can or does feed on birds if sufficient need or opportunity arises.

The key here is 'need'. Vampire bats don't store fat, and blood is the entirety of their diet. They are doomed to keep feeding on a regular basis or die. If they don't feed they can't survive for more than a couple of days.
 
I think this is perhaps the best thread for this video.


According to Ben G. Thomas, the most recent remains of the giant vampire bat are from only three hundred years ago, and there are still reports of unusually large vampires. So, maybe...

However, the title is a little click-baity, as the creature likely had a wingspan of only 50cm. So, it's not going to carry maidens off to its castle.
 
Newly discovered remains of the giant vampire bat Desmodus draculae will help in learning more about this extinct largest-of-all vampire bats.
Remains of Giant Vampire Bat From 100,000 Years Ago Found in Argentinian Cave

The jawbone of a bat that lived 100,000 years ago has been confirmed as belonging to an extinct species of giant vampire bat.

The discovery of the jawbone of the species Desmodus draculae, found in a cave in Argentina, is helping fill in the huge gaps in the history of these amazing animals, and could provide some clues as to why these bats eventually died out. ...

Today, just three of the roughly 1,400 known bat species are vampire bats, or Desmodontinae – those that live solely on the blood of other creatures, known as hematophages.

All three can only be found in Central and South America: the common vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus), the hairy-legged vampire bat (Diphylla ecaudata), and the white-winged vampire bat (Diaemus youngi).

These three species seem very closely related, which suggests that hematophagy only evolved once in bats, and that all vampire bat species – extant and extinct – all diverged from a common ancestor.

Fossils from extinct vampire bat species can help us unravel why today's species survived. And the new D. draculae discovery has a lot of significance for a small bone. ...

We've known about the existence of D. draculae since it was first formally described in 1988, although we don't know much more about it. It lived during the Pleistocene in Central and South America, up until fairly recently ...

It was also the largest vampire bat known to have existed – it was around 30 percent larger than its closest living relative, today's common vampire bat, with a wingspan estimated to be around 50 centimeters (20 inches). ...
FULL STORY: https://www.sciencealert.com/remain...00-000-years-ago-found-in-an-argentinian-cave

PUBLISHED RESEARCH REPORT:
Santiago Brizuela and Daniel A. Tassara
"New Record of the Vampire Desmodus draculae (Chiroptera) from the Late Pleistocene of Argentina"
Ameghiniana 58(2), 169-176, (30 April 2021).
https://doi.org/10.5710/AMGH.30.12.2020.3379

https://bioone.org/journals/ameghin...a-from-the/10.5710/AMGH.30.12.2020.3379.short
 
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Vamps who lunch.

Female vampire bats like to meet up with friends for dinner, according to a new study.

They also seem to use a special call, previously unknown to scientists, during their nightly hunting trips. The findings indicate that bonds forged in the roost could help the animals save time and energy when grabbing a blood meal.

The new work “opens up a whole new avenue of vampire bat research,” says Mirjam Knörnschild, a behavioral ecologist at the Berlin Museum of Natural History, who was not involved in the study. Efforts like this, she adds, are “crucial” for understanding social cooperation in bats.

Vampire bats live in groups ranging from a dozen to thousands of individuals. Colonies roost in caves or hollow trees and typically consist of mother-daughter pairs, young males, and transient males that fly in to mate. The bats are a great model for analyzing animal behavior, says Gerald Carter, a behavioral ecologist at Ohio State University, Columbus, who has been studying the social lives of these bats for a decade. That’s because the pug-nosed mammals spend most of their time in the small, enclosed space of the roost, where they form close relationships with relatives and unrelated “friends.”

https://www.science.org/content/article/vampire-bats-take-their-blood-meals-friends
 
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