How we discovered the vampire bats that have learned to drink human blood (2024)

What’s for dinner? For some Brazilian vampire bats, these days it’s human blood.

That’s the surprising outcome of my research, recently published in the Acta Chiropterologica journal, which revealed that the hairy-legged vampire bat of Pernambuco, Brazil, has developed an appetite for human blood over that of other possible prey.

This finding upends all the existing scientific literature on this bat species, which typically feeds on bird blood.

A little-known bat (with a secret)

The hairy-legged vampire bat (Diphylla ecaudata) is the least-studied of the three species of known vampire bats. In 20 years working as a zoologist, I had never held a live specimen in my hands.

But there I was in Pernambuco’s drylands in 2013, inside a cave in the Catimbau National Park, when I focused the flashlight on a little colony of bats above my head and spotted a few Diphylla.

Though not the prettiest species of bat, they are more delicate than some, with a gentle face, small ears and, I must say, a soft look.

On the ground below the bats, I saw pools of guano, or bat droppings, each the size of a soup dish. Vampire bats are hematophagous, meaning they can only eat blood, so their excrement is tinged red.

How we discovered the vampire bats that have learned to drink human blood (1)

Diphylla prey on bird blood, but in Catimbau Park, native birds of medium and large size have become locally extinct. Probably due to unregulated hunting, the white-browed guan, the yellow-legged tinamou, and the picazuro pigeon — all potential prey for Diphylla in the past — were no longer observed there by 2013.

So what were those Diphylla feeding on, if not birds? Goat blood might make sense. I had seen many grazing in the park, raised by the hundreds of families who still live in Catimbau, despite its legal status as a natural protection zone.

I returned to the Federal University of Pernambuco in Recife, determined to investigate Diphylla’_s_ diet.

The scientific method

Extracting DNA from vampire-bat guano is no small feat. Proteins in their digestive tracts can break down the DNA of the blood consumed, and samples collected in caves can be contaminated with exogenous DNA, either from other organisms in the guano (such as bacteria, fungi and insects) or by the sample collector.

For this task I joined forces with Fernanda Ito, then an UFPE student working toward her undergraduate honours thesis. She liked the idea of using fecal DNA to figure out the bats’ prey as her thesis project. Later our team welcomed Rodrigo Torres, from UFPE’s Department of Zoology, who works with genetics applied to biodiversity conservation.

If all went well, the sequences we obtained would be compared to those deposited in GenBank, indicating the possible prey Diphylla were feeding on.

The process of extracting and purifying the DNA was as long and dramatic as a Brazilian soap opera. For days, Fernanda persistently tested and modified protocols at various temperatures and lengths of time, until finding the right combination that would allow the perfect reaction to happen.

Finally, when Fernanda was on the verge of quitting in frustration, she managed to sequence the samples. When we compared our bat DNA sequences with those obtained from goats, pigs, cows, dogs, chickens and humans, we found that Diphylla had consumed blood from chickens and humans.

How we discovered the vampire bats that have learned to drink human blood (2)

At least three samples obtained on different dates pointed to the consumption of human blood. The other 12 of our 15 samples found evidence of Diphylla sucking chickens’ blood.

This was an intriguing finding. Science suggests that Diphylla would never consume human blood. Indeed, three articles (from Mexico in 1966 and 1981 and from Brazil in 1994) even indicated that in captivity, Diphylla would rather starve to death than feed on blood from cows, rats, rabbits, pigs or live goats.

Groundbreaking data

Our data was contrary to all the information available on Diphylla so far. In fact, we had seen reports that indicated that this species actually has a physiological intolerance of mammalian blood, which has more dry matter, mainly proteins, than bird blood (which contains more water and fat).

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That would explain why the bats weren’t going after the goats, as I had originally thought. But how to explain the strange preference for human blood?

It seems the scarcity of native large bird species in the park has led Diphylla to develop a more flexible diet than scientists could have imagined. That may be good for Diphylla’s survival, but it’s also an indicator that the area we studied is not faring well. In northeastern Brazil’s dry forests, native species are disappearing, presumably forcing other species, too, to change their diet and behaviour.

The presence of human blood in bat guano also raises public health issues. Clearly, some people in the Catimbau region are being bitten by bats, raising the risk that rabies and other diseases could be transmitted.

On the positive side, Fernanda defended her thesis with success and our article in Acta Chiropterologica is attracting media coverage worldwide.

Discovering that bats can learn to live on human blood has given me several new ideas to explore, such as radio-tracking them to find their human prey.

New research will start soon. Now, I just have to find a new Fernanda …

How we discovered the vampire bats that have learned to drink human blood (2024)

FAQs

How we discovered the vampire bats that have learned to drink human blood? ›

When we compared our bat DNA sequences with those obtained from goats, pigs, cows, dogs, chickens and humans, we found that Diphylla had consumed blood from chickens and humans. At least three samples obtained on different dates pointed to the consumption of human blood.

How did vampire bats evolve to drink blood? ›

How did vampire bats evolve to survive on blood alone? According to research published in Science Advances, scientists found that the loss of 13 genes in vampire bats over the course of their evolution may be the reason why they can survive on blood. Of these 13 genes, 10 were previously unknown gene losses.

Who discovered vampire bats? ›

Vampire bats were first officially described in scientific literature in 1810 and documented by Darwin in 1839, but it was the 1897 release of Bram Stoker's Dracula that solidified a relationship between vampires and bats in western culture. Humans aren't their first choice for a meal.

Do vampire bats feed on human blood? ›

Vampire bats are sanguivores, organisms that feed upon the blood of other animals. They are the only mammals that feed exclusively on blood. Despite horror-movie depictions, vampire bats very rarely bite humans to feed on their blood.

Are there vampire bats in the US? ›

Yes, but not in most of the United States. Of the three species of vampire bats in North America, only a single specimen has been recorded for the United States in extreme southwest Texas. Vampire bats do not suck blood--they make a small incision with their sharp front teeth and lap up the blood with their tongue.

What does blood taste like to vampire bats? ›

Vampire bats are thought to have transitioned from eating insects to eating blood by consuming blood-filled insects like mosquitoes. Blood is not known to taste delicious, but rather, metallic and bitter.

Why do vampire bats have a taste for blood? ›

Vampire bats are also better equipped to stomach their bloody meals, literally and figuratively: one of the missing genes reduces taste receptors (blood = yuck, even for bats), while another allows their stomach to expand like a balloon to hold up to 1.4x their weight in liquid to maximize calorie consumption.

How long do vampires live? ›

They live immortal lifespans, despite these weaknesses, and it is fairly common for a vampire to be centuries old, although they still slowly age; a vampire who is six hundred years old may appear as a middle-aged breather would.

Do vampire bat bites hurt? ›

Even though bat bites don't hurt, vampire bats can spread a disease called rabies. This can hurt farmers' livestock, especially cattle herds. However, vampire bats can actually be quite tame, and even friendly to humans.

How long is a bat's pregnancy? ›

A bat's pregnancy lasts between six and nine weeks. The length of the pregnancy depends on the species and can be influenced by weather, climate and availability of food. Bats usually give birth to a single baby (called a pup) each year.

What to do if a bat touches you? ›

Tell an adult, such as a teacher, nurse, parent, school guard, or police officer, right away if you have touched a bat or a bat has touched you. There is medicine that can keep you from getting rabies. For the medicine to work well, it must be given soon after contact with a bat.

What happens if a vampire bat bites you? ›

Bats, raccoons, and skunks are the most common animals to transmit rabies in the United States. Rabies is a viral infection of your central nervous system. It almost always leads to death if it's not treated with a prophylactic vaccine before symptoms appear.

Do vampire bats smell blood? ›

Vampire Bats Smell & Find Blood With Heat-Detecting Noses.

What are the 3 types of vampire bats? ›

Out of nearly 1,000 species of bats worldwide, there are only 3 species of vampire bats: the common vampire bat, the hairy-legged vampire bat and the white-winged vampire bat.

Where do real vampire bats live? ›

Vampire bats tend to live in colonies in almost completely dark places, such as caves, old wells, hollow trees, and buildings. They range in Central to South America and live in arid to humid, tropical and subtropical areas.

How long do vampire bats live? ›

Vampire bats live up to nine years in the wild and up to 20 years in captivity.

How do vampire bats get blood differently than vampires? ›

Vampire bats need special facial nerves that can sense the heat of their victims' veins, as well as those sharp teeth to access them while doing minimal damage to their host's skin. What's more, the bats require an anticoagulant enzyme in their saliva to keep their host's blood from clotting when they drink.

Why do vampires consume blood? ›

When vampires bite, they receive strength and energy which gives them life. While doing this, they are killing souls by drinking their blood in order to regain their own life. Although the vampire is receiving life, the prey is being subjected to death or a form of an undead state.

What is the origin of vampires turning into bats? ›

Bram Stoker's iconic novel Dracula popularized the image of vampires as cruel monsters who shapeshift into bats. If Stoker's Count Dracula could have been more of the generous vampire bat and less of the psychotic killer, things could have turned out differently for the arch-villain.

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