The Prague Post - Dutch retiree helps solve mystery of strangely large bat penis

EUR -
AED 4.105252
AFN 78.797051
ALL 98.893319
AMD 433.749643
ANG 2.00029
AOA 1024.357672
ARS 1257.401991
AUD 1.726388
AWG 2.014619
AZN 1.894575
BAM 1.967649
BBD 2.255714
BDT 135.737404
BGN 1.958856
BHD 0.421283
BIF 3281.510303
BMD 1.117681
BND 1.458201
BOB 7.719591
BRL 6.272418
BSD 1.117243
BTN 95.296148
BWP 15.251571
BYN 3.656166
BYR 21906.540172
BZD 2.244124
CAD 1.559656
CDF 3208.861365
CHF 0.940199
CLF 0.027393
CLP 1051.159719
CNY 8.054398
CNH 8.044461
COP 4708.620804
CRC 567.726442
CUC 1.117681
CUP 29.618536
CVE 110.790095
CZK 24.942161
DJF 198.633856
DKK 7.459515
DOP 65.829876
DZD 149.154865
EGP 56.405322
ERN 16.765209
ETB 148.552518
FJD 2.528748
FKP 0.847332
GBP 0.84049
GEL 3.068057
GGP 0.847332
GHS 14.222485
GIP 0.847332
GMD 80.472573
GNF 9673.526071
GTQ 8.589727
GYD 233.733349
HKD 8.714585
HNL 29.051336
HRK 7.534623
HTG 146.071597
HUF 404.018956
IDR 18575.851922
ILS 3.973953
IMP 0.847332
INR 95.126524
IQD 1463.532969
IRR 47054.354819
ISK 145.667499
JEP 0.847332
JMD 177.981798
JOD 0.792767
JPY 165.002627
KES 144.744858
KGS 97.741511
KHR 4488.605618
KMF 492.340141
KPW 1005.907529
KRW 1580.819534
KWD 0.343385
KYD 0.93099
KZT 567.877027
LAK 24164.25501
LBP 100101.550337
LKR 333.870553
LRD 223.436524
LSL 20.473189
LTL 3.300221
LVL 0.676074
LYD 6.13595
MAD 10.421659
MDL 19.528249
MGA 5050.436086
MKD 61.542104
MMK 2346.553122
MNT 3994.476518
MOP 8.967945
MRU 44.27462
MUR 51.893802
MVR 17.214206
MWK 1937.392892
MXN 21.713176
MYR 4.831172
MZN 71.421162
NAD 20.473465
NGN 1791.004651
NIO 41.107548
NOK 11.577662
NPR 152.468749
NZD 1.882346
OMR 0.430293
PAB 1.117208
PEN 4.084497
PGK 4.639942
PHP 62.334189
PKR 314.600711
PLN 4.233858
PYG 8921.846685
QAR 4.072177
RON 5.103445
RSD 117.931762
RUB 89.254777
RWF 1599.805326
SAR 4.191965
SBD 9.333582
SCR 15.894298
SDG 671.167312
SEK 10.873809
SGD 1.454963
SHP 0.878321
SLE 25.427268
SLL 23437.204022
SOS 638.430318
SRD 40.796462
STD 23133.732267
SVC 9.776002
SYP 14533.551955
SZL 20.467345
THB 37.151287
TJS 11.585057
TMT 3.911882
TND 3.379307
TOP 2.617718
TRY 43.365527
TTD 7.581691
TWD 34.016599
TZS 3003.767623
UAH 46.42962
UGX 4088.676695
USD 1.117681
UYU 46.66099
UZS 14406.756824
VES 103.625748
VND 29016.665443
VUV 134.091698
WST 3.105526
XAF 659.919194
XAG 0.033979
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.020588
XDR 0.82109
XOF 659.939985
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.217081
ZAR 20.499279
ZMK 10060.468697
ZMW 29.605681
ZWL 359.892704
  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    63.81

    +1.27%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.06

    -0.09%

  • RYCEF

    0.3200

    10.7

    +2.99%

  • RELX

    0.5700

    52.4

    +1.09%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    67.53

    0%

  • RIO

    0.8600

    62.27

    +1.38%

  • SCS

    -0.1100

    10.71

    -1.03%

  • AZN

    -1.2300

    67.72

    -1.82%

  • GSK

    -1.0200

    36.35

    -2.81%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    9.06

    -0.11%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    93.71

    +0.65%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    12.88

    -1.01%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    22.39

    +0.4%

  • BCE

    -0.5800

    21.98

    -2.64%

  • BTI

    -0.2900

    40.69

    -0.71%

  • BP

    0.3700

    30.56

    +1.21%

Dutch retiree helps solve mystery of strangely large bat penis
Dutch retiree helps solve mystery of strangely large bat penis / Photo: GUILLAUME SOUVANT - AFP/File

Dutch retiree helps solve mystery of strangely large bat penis

Scientists have solved the mystery of one of the animal kingdom's most disproportionately large penises thanks to a Dutch retiree recording bat sex in a church attic.

Text size:

The serotine bat does not use its strangely large penis for penetration, but instead as a "copulatory arm" during mating, a European team of researchers said on Monday.

This marks the first time that a mammal has been documented reproducing without having penetrative sex, the researchers added.

The serotine bat, which has a wingspan of more than 35 centimetres (14 inches), is common in woodlands across Europe and Asia.

Nicolas Fasel, a researcher at Switzerland's University of Lausanne, told AFP that his team had been working on the bat for years and had observed that its "penis is super long when it is erect".

Their penises are around seven times longer than the vaginas of female serotine bats, the scientists measured.

Stranger still, the head of the penis expands into the shape of a heart, making it seven times wider than their partners' vaginas.

The scientists were baffled.

"There is no way it can penetrate with this structure," said Fasel, the first author of a new study in the journal Current Biology.

Relatively little is known about how bats mate because it is difficult to observe, and the scientists could not see a way of solving this mystery.

But then Fasel received a strange-looking email.

- 'Really amazed' -

"Penis," was the first word of the email's subject line, followed by something in Dutch, then the word "Eptesicus".

"So I was thinking, OK, that looks like spam," Fasel said.

However Eptesicus is the genus of the serotine bat, so Fasel risked opening the email and watching the videos inside.

"Then I was really amazed because we had our answer," he said.

The email was from Jan Jeucken, a retiree with no scientific background who lives in the southern village of Castenray in the Netherlands.

Jeucken had become interested in a population of serotine bats living in the attic of a local church, and had set up cameras recording huge amounts of footage.

Fasel said Jeucken's "passion made him the best guy" to understand the bats, and the retiree was named as a co-author of the study.

The researchers analysed 93 mating events in the church attic, as well as four recorded at a bat rehabilitation centre in war-torn Ukraine.

By filming through a grid that the bats climbed on, the researchers were able to observe them mating.

Female serotine bats have a large membrane between their tail and ankles which they can use to shield their genitals.

During mating, the males grab the females by the nape and use their large penises like an extra arm to reach around and remove this membrane, the researchers said.

Then follows a long, still embrace called "contact mating," during which sperm is transferred.

While this form of reproduction -- also called "cloacal kissing" -- is common in birds, it had never previously been observed in a mammal.

For serotine bats, the process takes some time. The average session was 53 minutes, but the longest lasted nearly 13 hours.

Fasel speculated that the female bats could use their unusually long cervixes to hold onto the sperm of several different males for months before choosing which male they bear offspring with.

It is possible that other bat species mate without penetration, Fasel said, adding more research was needed.

"We could see that there are many, many species with quite strange penises," he said.

T.Musil--TPP