Litcius/Paper detail

Bats surf storm fronts during spring migration

Edward Hurme, Ivan Lenzi, Martin Wikelski, Timm A. Wild, Dina K. N. Dechmann

2025Science15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Long-distance migration, common in passerine birds, is rare and poorly studied in bats. Piloting a 1.2-gram IoT (Internet of Things) tag with onboard processing, we tracked the daily location, temperature, and activity of female common noctules ( Nyctalus noctula ) during spring migration across central Europe up to 1116 kilometers. Over 3 years, 71 bats migrated tens to hundreds of kilometers per night, predominantly with incoming warm fronts, which provided them with wind support. Bats also showed unexpected flexibility in their ability to migrate across a wide range of conditions if needed. However, females leaving toward the end of the season showed higher total activity per distance traveled, a possible cost for their flexible migration timing.

Topics & Concepts

PasserineSpring (device)StormWinter stormRange (aeronautics)GeographyHome rangeMeteorologyEnvironmental scienceEcologyBiologyEngineeringMechanical engineeringAerospace engineeringHabitatBat Biology and Ecology StudiesAvian ecology and behaviorMarine animal studies overview