Jersey Grey Long-eared Bat Project – update

As part of our continuing commitment to the island’s environment, we run the Jersey Grey Long-eared Bat project to undertake research to improve the island’s understanding of the species’ ecology and to help improve conservation efforts.

Bat with large ears resting on glove

This summer’s heatwave may have had a heartbreaking consequence for one of Jersey’s rarest bat species. Following June’s extreme temperatures, our founder Piers Sangan discovered that two maternal roosts of grey long-eared bats had suffered catastrophic losses — with up to 100% of this year’s pups potentially lost.

While adult bats were able to abandon the roosts and move somewhere cooler, the juveniles couldn’t make that transition. As Piers told BBC News: “Basically, a generation died from the heatwave.” Had the heat arrived just a week earlier or later, the outcome might have been very different — the pups would either have been small enough to be carried to safety, or old enough to fly themselves.

The grey long-eared bat is already critically endangered in the UK, with fewer than a thousand individuals remaining. In Jersey the species is considered under-recorded, partly because it is acoustically very quiet and is easily missed by standard survey methods — which is exactly why the Jersey Grey Long-eared Project exists.

We’ll be watching the population closely in the years ahead. The long-term impact remains unknown, but there will be adults missing from the population down the line — a sobering reminder of what climate change could mean for species already on the edge.

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