When Hunters Leave Their Mark: Ben’s New Paper on Bat Roost Use in Nigeria

The Kingston Lab is happy to share a new publication from Ben and Tigga, just out in Animal Conservation. This one comes from years of hard fieldwork in the caves of Cross River State, Nigeria, and the findings are striking.

We set out to understand what influences Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) to use some caves and not others. Cave area, cave complexity, cave temperature and humidity, dominant tree height etc…. all the factors known to influence roost selection in bats were accounted for. Our findings showed that hunting pressure from humans was the most important driver of roost use. Caves showing the highest levels of hunting pressure, measured using counts of abandoned hunting sticks, held the fewest bats and in many cases none at all. We also identified a clear threshold: beyond six hunting sticks, bat abundance drops sharply, suggesting that’s the point at which bats start abandoning roosts or are hunted to local extinction. Meanwhile, the two caves holding the biggest colonies in the landscape? Completely inaccessible to hunters. The bats, it seems, know what’s good for them.

Hunting pressure was the strongest predictor of the Egyptian fruit bat abundance across 27 caves. Abundance declined sharply beyond a threshold of six hunting sticks, after which bats start to abandon cave roosts. Intense hunting (for consumption) pressure redistributes bats across the landscape, with serious conservation and One Health implications as this species is a natural reservoir of Marburg virus. 

The conservation implications are significant on their own – R. aegyptiacus has slow reproductive rates, and offtake of up to 4000 bats per cave visit (as we observed in this study) makes recovery extremely difficult. But the One Health angle makes this even more urgent. This species is a known reservoir of Marburg virus, and intense hunting is redistributing bats across the landscape, and also concentrating large aggregations near human settlements, potentially increasing spillover risk.

Check out the full paper here!

New publication: Limestone Karst Ecology and Human Impacts on Cave Bats in Myanmar

The Kingston lab is excited to share a new publication from Moe Moe! Her research highlights the ecological importance of limestone karst caves in Southern Shan State, Myanmar, as key habitats for diverse and understudied bat species. These bats play crucial roles in maintaining ecosystem balance through insect control, pollination, and nutrient cycling.

The study found that cave characteristics such as size and temperature strongly influence bat populations, while human disturbances—such as guano harvesting, hunting, and cave development—negatively impact their abundance.

Fig. 2. Distribution of Bat Cave Vulnerability (BV) classes across 38 surveyed caves. BV classes were derived following the Bat Cave Vulnerability Index (BCVI) framework and categorized as A – High vulnerability, B – Moderate vulnerability, and C – Low vulnerability. Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of caves assigned to each class.

With many caves identified as vulnerable, this research emphasizes the urgent need for conservation efforts to protect biodiversity and reduce potential public health risks associated with human–bat interactions. Find the full paper is here: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecco.2026.e04071