The British Crown Colony of Montserrat is a small 100 km2 island located in the northern Lesser Antilles (16 45′ N, 62 10′ W; fig. 11.1). Long before Christopher Columbus discovered and named the island in 1493, humans knew that bats existed on Montserrat, as indicated by the presence of bat bones (Brachyphylla cavernarum) in Amerindian trash middens ca. 200 AD (Steadman et al. 1984a; Steadman et al. 1984b; Wheeler 1988). The first written account concerning the presence of bats on the island alludes to the habits of Stenoderma montserratense (sic; now Ardops nichollsi montserratensis), which “is said to hang all day under the branches of trees, and not take refuge in holes and crannies as most other species do” and may be responsible for “much damage to the cacao plantations”(Thomas 1894). Since the late 1970s, Montserrat has received a great deal of attention from bat biologists, including 12 surveys that have established a database including 2,602 captures of 10 species of bats from over 60 locations around the island (fig. 11.2; JK Jones and R. Baker in 1978; D. Pierson et al. in 1984: S. Pedersen in 1993–1994; M. Morton and D. Fawcett in 1995; Pedersen and others in 1997–1998, 2000–2002, 2004–2006; G. Kwiecinski in 2003). Montserrat has a relatively simple chiropteran fauna (genus-to-species ratio 1: 1), including one piscivore (Noctilio leporinus), one omnivore (Brachyphylla cavernarum), one nectarivore (Monophyllus plethodon), four frugivores (Ardops nichollsi, Artibeus jamaicensis, Chiroderma improvisum, Sturnira thomasi), and three insectivorous species (Natalus stramineus, Tadarida brasiliensis, Molossus molossus), representing four families—Noctilionidae, Phyllostomidae, Natalidae, and Molossidae. Two of these, S. thomasi and C. improvisum, are very rare endemic species that had been previously reported only from Guadeloupe (Baker and Genoways 1978), 55 km southeast (upwind) of Montserrat.