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NAU Lab Develops Tool To ID Bats From Guano

Bats in a mine
(Photo by Shawn Thomas via Bat Ecology and Genetics Lab)
Bats in a mine.

A lab at Northern Arizona University has developed a new way to identify rare and endangered bats — by extracting DNA from their droppings.

Faith Walker is co-founder of the Bat Ecology and Genetics Lab at NAU. She’s developed a genetic tool called a “mini-barcode.” It compares DNA extracted from bat guano to the DNA in a reference library.

Walker said the tool makes it easier to locate bats globally.

“Guano doesn’t fly around,” she said. “It just stays in one place. So you can go to a bat roost, be it a cave or mine or building, and you might not see any bats, but you’ll see guano.”

About a third of the world’s bats have DNA barcodes on file. The mini-barcode can identify all of those bats to the genus level and most of them to the species level.

Researchers can check an online database to see if the mini-barcode works for the species they want to study. They can send guano to NAU for testing. It costs about $1 per pellet.  

Next, Walker wants to develop a mobile device that biologists can take into the field.

The program is called “ Species From Feces.” A description of the method appears in the journal PLoS ONE .

Photos from 'Species From Feces' Program

Source: Bat Ecology and Genetics Lab

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Melissa Sevigny is a reporter at KNAU in Flagstaff.