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Too Many Bats Are Being Killed for Research

07/20/2017

The work of zoologists worldwide is often an important asset for biodiversity protection, but a new article notes that scientists kill many bats—even of threatened species—to study them.

The work of zoologists worldwide is often an important asset for biodiversity protection, but a new article notes that scientists kill many bats—even of threatened species—to study them.

In the last 20 years, 222 studies mentioned the collection of 7482 bats of 376 species, mostly from South America and Asia (India, China, and Southeast Asia). Researchers mostly aimed to compile checklists or establish geographic ranges.

Bats are long-lived, slowly reproducing creatures, and the potential effects of collection on their already dwindling populations are not always known. Although in some cases collecting specimens for science is essential, the use of modern technology—such as photography, X-ray, sound recording, and state-of-art DNA analysis—could often avoid killing bats.

“We are aware that museum collections are vital to science, but there are strong ethical reasons to avoid unnecessary collection. We urge that appropriate ethical protocols are developed to strongly limit voucher collection to cases when this is strictly necessary,” said Dr. Danilo Russo, lead author of the Mammal Review article.

 

Additional Information

Link to Studyhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mam.12095/full

About Journal

Mammal Review is the official scientific periodical of the Mammal Society, and covers all aspects of mammalian biology and ecology. Hypothesis-driven analytical and systematic reviews of current theoretical and applied research on mammals, meta-analyses, practical assessments of techniques for studying mammals and large-scale considerations of the status, conservation and management of mammals are particularly welcome. We publish limited numbers of comments, in which authors respond to papers published in Mammal Review, and short communications, in which new findings or methods from the field of mammalogy are described. We also publish perspectives, in which authors present an original point of view on any aspect of mammalian biology, behaviour, ecology and evolution, or on a management issue in mammalogy.

Penny Smith
+44 (0)1243 770448
sciencenewsroom@wiley.com

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