

Now extinct: the Christmas Island pipistrelle. Photo by: Lindy Lumsden.

Nights on Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean will never again be the same. The last echolocation call of a tiny bat native to the island, the Christmas Island pipistrelle (Pipistrellus murrayi), was recorded on August 26th 2009, and since then there has been only silence. Perhaps even more alarming is that nothing was done to save the species. According to a new paper in Conservation Letters the bat was lost to extinction while Australian government officials equivocated and delayed action even though they were warned repeatedly that the situation was dire. The Christmas Island pipistrelle is the first mammal to be confirmed extinct in Australia in 50 years.

Weighing less than a U.S. nickel, the Christmas Island pipistrelle fed on insects and roosted in tree hollows and decaying vegetation. Just a few decades ago, the bat was widespread on Christmas Island and roosted in groups of 50 or so animals.

“It is estimated that a single pipistrelle consumes its body weight in insects per night,” Tara Martin lead author with Australia’s national science agency, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), told mongabay.com. “While the loss of the pipistrelle is likely to lead to more insects, it is too early to tell what the long term ecological impact of this will be on the island.”

A view to extinction

Once abundant, after the mid-1980s the situation for the Christmas Island pipistrelle took a sudden turn for the worst. Its population began to drop off while the bat vanished from much of its former range. Between 1994 to 2006, the population fell by over 80 percent.

In January 2009 an expedition found only four individuals in a single roost. Bat expert, Lindy Lumsden, at the time warned the Australian government that the population could be as low as 20 bats and “if the current rate of decline continues, this species is likely to be extinct within the next 6 months.”

Lumsden added, “It is critical therefore that a captive breeding program is established immediately as insurance against further decline in numbers and as a source of individuals to reestablish wild populations once the cause of decline has been identified and controlled.”

But the Australian government hesitated and instead established a committee to consider options. Months passed. In August 2009, Lumsden was finally given permission to capture bats for captive breeding. But by then it was too late. Four weeks of surveying located only a single bat through its echolocation. Researchers were unable to catch it and the bat went silent on August 26th, 2009.

“It is quite possible that this is one of the few times that an extinction of species in the wild can be marked to the day,” the entry on the bat for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) notes.

While it is possible a colony of bats remains, it’s unlikely giving the extensive surveying by researchers.

Scientists still don’t know what pushed the bat to extinction, although there are a number of possibilities, including a slew of invasive species such as feral cats, common wolf snake, and a recent invasion of yellow crazy ants. Disease is another possibility, though researchers could find no sign of the bats suffering from illness.

A lack of leadership



A Christmas Island pipistrelle. Photo by: Lindy Lumsden.

So, what went wrong? According to the paper in Conservation Letters a lack of leadership doomed the species.

“Leadership has been found to be a key element in the recovery of many endangered species around the world. Without a ‘champion’ to maintain the pressure on governments to act, species will continue to fall through the cracks,” explains Martin, who notes that the leader doesn’t have to be an individual but could be an organization or government team.

Martin says that officials could have decided that a captive breeding program was not worth it given so few individuals remaining, and the bat should be let go with scarce resources devoted elsewhere..

“However no such decision was apparent,” Martin say. Instead officials delayed making any decision whatsoever until eight months after warnings.

In the end “a lack of brave decision making in the face of uncertainty, and a lack of accountability for stalling decisions contributed to the loss of the pipistrelle,” says Martin.

“Monitoring [of endangered species] must be linked to decisions, institutions must be accountable for these decisions and decisions to act must be made before critical opportunities, and species, are lost forever,” Martin says.

Where leadership made the difference: the orange-bellied parrot



An orange-bellied parrot (Neophema chrysogaster) male, Melaleuca, Southwest Conservation Area, Tasmania, Australia. Photo by: J.J. Harrison.

The orange-bellied parrot (Neophema chrysogaster), according to the paper, shows how bold leadership can make the difference. While the orange-bellied parrot faced a similar situation to the Christmas Island pipistrelle, it has seen a very different, and far more hopeful, outcome.

In 1984, the orange-bellied parrot population dropped to around 150 birds. Two years later the first captive population was established, but the bird continued to vanish from the wild. In 2009, researchers predicted the bird would be extinct in the wild in a few years. A recovery team decided within one day to capture more wild orange-bellied parrots to boost the captive population. Today there are nearly 200 captive orange-bellied parrots, and the species has a chance for reintroduction into the wild and long-term survival, unlike the Christmas Island pipistrelle.

According to Martin the major difference between the orange-bellied parrot and the Christmas Island pipistrelle was that the parrot had a recovery team devoted to its survival, which had been established as far back as 1986. This team closely monitored the parrot over the decades and was capable of taking swift action to save it from extinction.

“Recovery teams are an integral part of species recovery success because they act as the ‘champion’ to ensure the decision process is carried through from the information gathering stage to the implementation of actions and monitoring of success,” explains Martin.

Part of the problem, says Martin, may be that the public simply likes parrots more than bats, regardless of their ecological roles or importance.

“As humans we inevitably place more value on some species than others. In the case of the orange-bellied Parrot, it has had a committed multi-agency, multi-government recovery team including members from universities and NGOs lobbying and working hard for its protection for nearly 30 years. No such recovery team or ‘champion’ existed for the pipistrelle,” she says, adding that, “There is little doubt that if the pipistrelle had of resembled a panda, a captive program would have been established a long time ago.”

While the Christmas Island pipistrelle is gone, Martin says it has left behind lessons for future conservation action.

“The lessons learned here are relevant to the world. Stemming the loss of global biodiversity through recovery planning will require brave, effective governance, leadership and decision making in the face of uncertainty.”

Unfortunately the Christmas Island pipistrelle is now added to an extensive list of mammal extinctions on the island, including Maclear’s rat (Rattus maclean), the bulldog rat (Rattus nativitatis), and perhaps even the Christmas Island shrew (Crocidura trichura), which hasn’t been recorded since the 1980s. With the loss of the Christmas Island pipistrelle, the last remaining endemic mammal may be the Christmas Island fruit bat (Pteropus melanotus natalis), a subspecies of a bat found on nearby islands including Sumatra.



A Christmas Island pipistrelle. Photo by: Lindy Lumsden.

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CITATION: Tara G. Martin, Simon Nally, Andrew A. Burbidge, Sophie Arnall, Stephen T. Garnett,

Matt W. Hayward, Linda F. Lumsden, Peter Menkhorst, Eve McDonald-Madden,

& Hugh P. Possingham. Acting fast helps avoid extinction. Conservation Letters. 2012.

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