Bats already tagged were let go, and ones that weren’t tagged were put into special bags and taken to a central area where a PIT tag was inserted.
These PIT tags – the same sort of device used to microchip dogs – are used to individually identify bats as they fly in and out of known roosts. The roosts are equipped with aerials that can read the tag number and store this information along with the date and time.
“We tagged 219 bats over three nights, surpassing our target of 200, and catching a good mix of juveniles and adults, males and females,” Tertia says.
“During and after the tagging period – between January 24 and February 10 – the bat loggers were operating at roost entrances.
“These loggers detect PIT-tagged bats going in or out of the roosts. The information collected includes the PIT tag ID of the bat, and the date and time when the bat left/entered the roost.”
Tertia says 788 individual tagged bats were detected, comprising animals tagged in previous years and newly tagged specimens captured during the 2023 work.
“I’m confident there are many more bats out there than the ones we tagged,” says Tertia, pointing to the value of the tags as providing crucial data to understand annual survival rates for the animals.
Pureora-based Biodiversity Ranger Troy McDonald, who contributed to the tagging work, describes the bats as “beautiful, incredibly unique and very feisty”, and the human team as “intelligent, passionate and lovely”.
“This Pureora population of pekapeka may be small in comparison to other Aotearoa populations, but they are unique because it is only here, they have been photographed feeding on and pollinating dactylanthus, a native parasitic plant also known as wood rose,” says Troy.
“I feel very lucky to not only have finally seen these amazing animals up close but also have handled, processed and released them,” he says.