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An Introduction to Bats

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The story of Mexican free-tailed bats in Central Texas ... Keep your pets vaccinated. If you think you have been exposed, seek medical attention promptly ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: An Introduction to Bats


1
An Introduction to Bats
2
BATS
  • Creepy, blind, blood-sucking RODENTS of the
    night.right?

3
What do YOU know about bats????
  • Bats are flying rats
  • Bats will attack you for no reason
  • Bats will fly into your hair
  • Bats are blind

4
Actually..
Nobody likes me.
  • Those are all just
  • BAT MYTHS
  • Bats wont fly into your hair or attack you
  • They arent blind at all
  • And they arent even rodents

5
The Only Way Rodents Can Fly
6
Common Questions about Bats
7
So, What ARE Bats???
  • Class Mammalia
  • Order Chiroptera (hand-wing)
  • Suborder Megachiroptera- flying foxes
  • 1 Family, 166 species
  • Suborder Microchiroptera- micro bats
  • 16 Families, 759 species

8
Bat Stats
  • 4,200 species of mammals
  • 1,000 species of bats
  • Of these, 88 are tropical

9
Bats Unique Small Mammals
  • Long lived (some up to 30 years)
  • Possibly due to reduced metabolic activity during
    torpor (40 of the year in some species).
  • Low fecundity
  • Temperate zone bats are monestrous and usually
    have 1 young/yr
  • Exceptions are the red bat (twins and triplets
    are common) and the southeastern myotis (twins
    are common)
  • Long period of infant dependency
  • 2 month gestation and 1 month of infant
    dependency
  • High survivorship
  • 50-80 chance of surviving each year once
    adulthood is reached (Findley 1993).
  • Common predators of bats are owls, snakes, hawks
    and feral cats

10
What do Bats Eat?
  • FRUIT- frugivory
  • FLOWERS- nectar or pollen
  • CARNIVORES- birds, reptiles, amphibians
  • FISH- highly specialized carnivores
  • BLOOD- sangrivory
  • INSECTS- aerial or foliage gleaners

11
How do Bats Fly?
  • Bats are the only mammals capable of TRUE powered
    flight

12
Bats Actually Fly With Their Hands, Not Their
Arms!
Illustration from BCI Educators Activity Book
13
What is Echolocation?
  • Microbats use ECHOLOCATION for navigation and
    prey capture

Animation from www.batcon.org.
14
More About Echolocation
  • 1700s Lazarro Spallanzani first proposed bats
    could see with their ears
  • 1930s Donald R. Griffin of Harvard coined term
    echolocation
  • Not all bats echolocate- just Microchioptera
  • Most echolocation calls are between 9 to 200kHz
  • Humans can only hear up to 20 kHz
  • Bat detectors allow us to hear bat calls
  • Can ID bat species by their echolocation calls

15
Why Are Bats Important?
  • Bats are important pollinators of many plant
    species including the agave plant (ie. Tequila),
    the saguaro cactus and many rainforest plant
    species
  • Bats are vital for the control of insect
    populations

16
Economic Importance of Bats in Agriculture
  • The story of Mexican free-tailed bats in Central
    Texas
  • Bracken Cave 20 million Mexican free-tailed
    bats (single largest aggregation of mammals in
    the world)
  • Central Texas caves, including Bracken Cave, are
    summer maternity roosts for 100 million Mexican
    free-tailed bats
  • It is estimated that these bats eat about 2
    million lbs of insects every night

Photo from www.batcrew.com
17
Tadarida brasiliensis Mexican Free-tailed bat
Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
18
Bats Aloft A Study of High Altitude Feeding
  • Bat Biologists Knew
  • Mexican Free-tailed bats fly as high as 10,000
    ft.
  • Densest aggregations are at 600 3,200 ft.
  • Entomologists Knew
  • Corn earworms are one of the most destructive Ag.
    pests in US
  • Corn earworm moths fly at same altitudes during
    dispersal
  • Early June emerge from Lower Rio Grande Valley
    of Mexico
  • 3 days after peak emergence in Mexico, moths
    begin laying eggs on agricultural crops in
    Central Texas
  • 3 weeks later, next generation spreads north
    through the Central US
  • Question
  • Could the free-tail bats be eating
  • corn earworm moths?????

19
The Problem
  • Helicoverpa zea
  • Corn Earworm

20
Bats Aloft Partners
  • Dr. Gary F. McCracken, University of Tennessee
  • Dr. Wayne Wolfe and Dr. John Westbrook of USDA
    Research Station in College Station, TX
  • U.S. Weather Service
  • Bat Conservation International

21
A Problem of Timing
  • Researchers needed to know if the moths were
    flying in TX at the same time the bats were
    feeding
  • Seemed improbable because the moths were still
    traveling to TX when the bats emerged in the
    evening
  • Plus, other studies had shown that moths were
    only 30 of the bats diet - EXCEPT..
  • Bats forge 2x a night- early evening and early
    morning
  • Further investigation showed that in early June,
    bats only ate 37 moths in the early evening but
    96 moths during their dawn feeding!

22
Doppler Radar Images
  • Images From McCracken, G. F. 1996. BATS 14(3)
    7-10 on www.batcon.org

23
Ok, Bats are Beneficial- but What About Bats and
RABIES???
  • Bats ARE carriers of rabies
  • Rabies caused by a bullet-shaped virus of the
    genus Lyssavirus. It causes a very serious viral
    infection of the Central Nervous System
  • Rabies can only be transmitted through saliva or
    spinal fluid, not blood or urine
  • If you are exposed, you will need post-exposure
    vaccinations ASAP (series of 5 itty-bitty shots
    in the arm)
  • FYI- Raccoons pose the most serious risk of
    rabies in South GA. Surprisingly, otters are
    also a risk

24
Rabies Prevention
  • DONT HANDLE WILD MAMMALS, including bats!!!!!!
  • Keep your pets vaccinated
  • If you think you have been exposed, seek medical
    attention promptly

25
Histoplasmosis
  • Histoplasmosis is caused by a ground fungus
    Histoplasma capsulatum
  • It causes flu-like symptoms which, in rare cases,
    can be quite serious
  • Severity of disease is related to dosage of
    exposure (number of spores inhaled)
  • It is most often associated with bird droppings,
    but bat and rodent droppings also pose a risk-
    esp. in hot, humid climates
  • Keep your home and outbuildings free of fecal
    material

26
Bats in Georgia16 Species
27
Family Vespertilionidae
  • The Evening Bats

28
Rafinesques Big-eared BatCorynorhinus
rafinesquii
  • Rare- possibly declining in numbers due to
    habitat loss
  • Roosts in abandoned buildings, hollow trees and
    caves in or near bottomland hardwood habitats
  • Will glean insects from foliage or capture them
    in flight
  • Easily disturbed

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
29
Southeastern MyotisMyotis austroriparius
  • Species of Concern by USFWS
  • Cave bat eastern US
  • Roosts in hollow trees, culverts, and bridges in
    areas w/o caves
  • Also associated with bottomland hardwood areas
  • Only Myotis bat to have twins

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
30
Big Brown BatEptesicus fuscus
  • One of the most common bats in urban areas and
    bat houses
  • Often roots in buildings- prefers snags in
    natural habitat
  • Often return to maternity roost where they were
    born
  • Forage in a variety of habitats

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
31
Eastern Red BatLasiurus borealis
  • Solitary, tree-roosting bat
  • Hangs by one foot
  • Will also hibernate in leaf litter on forest
    floor
  • Used to form large daytime migratory flocks in
    1800s
  • 2-5 young (usually 3)

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
32
Hoary BatLasiurus cinereus
  • Solitary, roots among foliage on forest edges
  • Can fly 24 miles in one night while foraging
  • Territorial over foraging sites
  • Often migrate with bird flocks
  • One of the most widespread bats in N. America
  • Hawaiis only native land mammal

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
33
Evening Bat Nycticeius humeralis
  • Abundant in SE US
  • Forest bat- hardly ever in caves
  • Little is known about its migration patterns

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
34
Eastern PipistrellePipistrellus subflavus
  • Common in forest edges and near agricultural
    areas
  • One of first bats to emerge in evening
  • Forage high in canopy
  • Will hibernate in caves and in culverts

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
35
Northen Yellow BatLasiurus intermedius
  • Roosts year-round in Spanish moss and palm fronds
  • Abundant on the coast
  • Will forage over sand dunes and beaches
  • Typically have 3 pups

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
36
Family Molossidae
  • The Free-tailed Bats

37
Mexican Free-tailed BatTadarida brasiliensis
  • Another very common urban and bat house bat
  • One of most widely distributed mammals in Western
    Hemisphere
  • Highly gregarious
  • Much of the population is migratory

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
38
Other Bats in Georgia
  • Silver-haired bat
  • Seminole bat
  • Gray myotis
  • Small-footed myotis
  • Little brown myotis
  • Eastern long-eared myotis
  • Indiana myotis- ENDANGERED

39
Bat Conservation
40
Threats to Bat Populations
  • Habitat destruction/fragmentation
  • Loss of historical roost sites
  • Disturbance of roost sites, esp. caves
  • Ignorance
  • General public negative attitudes
  • Scientific Very little is known about the
    distribution, numbers and specific requirements
    of most bat species

41
Hot Topics in Bat Research
  • Phylogeny and evolution
  • Functional morphology
  • Echolocation
  • Conservation Biology
  • North American Bat Conservation Partnership
    (NABCP) Strategic Plan

42
Top 5 Conservation Research Goals (NABCP)
  • Goal 1 Identify key resources- Flyways, roosts,
    drinking and foraging habitats
  • Goal 2 Establish baseline populations and
    trends
  • Goal 3 ID species requirements and limiting
    factors
  • Goal 4 Describe, quantify, and monitor the
    effects of current land-management practices and
    other human disturbances on bats.
  • Goal 5 Quantify the economic and social impacts
    of North American bats.

43
Top 4 Management Goals (NABCP)
  • Goal 1 Develop management standards and
    guidelines for bats, including them in existing
    management plans for other wildlife and
    associated habitat.
  • Goal 2 Identify, protect, and enhance key
    roosting, feeding, and drinking resources for
    bats. Reestablish bat populations to the extent
    necessary.
  • Goal 3 Incorporate bat conservation language
    into existing statutes for wildlife protection.
  • Goal 4 Integrate strategic plans for bats into
    other existing plans and initiatives.

44
Common Methods For Studying Bat Populations
  • Population Surveys Counts
  • Direct Roost Counts
  • Nightly Dispersal Counts
  • Maternity Roost Counts
  • Ultrasonic Bat Detectors
  • Simple handheld
  • ANABAT (records for computer analysis)
  • Population Surveys Captures
  • Mist Nets
  • Harp Traps
  • Trip Lines (over water sources)

45
Bat Management
46
Basic Habitat Requirements for Bats
  • ROOST SITES
  • Including maternity, bachelor and hibernation
    roosts
  • Caves, hollow trees, stumps, live trees,
    abandoned buildings, bridges, culverts, etc.
  • FORAGING HABITAT
  • Waterways, roads, pipelines, forests, edges,
    clearings, beaches, etc.
  • WATER SOURCES
  • Lakes, rivers, streams, bays, stock tanks,
    swimming pools, etc.

47
General Practices that Benefit Bats
  • Protection of known or potential roosts,
    including snags, hollow trees, abandoned
    buildings, caves, bridges, etc.
  • Creating artificial roosts
  • Maintaining water quality (BMPs)
  • Wise use of insecticides
  • Keep cats indoors!
  • Leave known bat populations undisturbed

48
Bat House Design
  • Bat houses should have the following specs
  • AT LEAST 2 ft. tall and 14 in. wide- bigger is
    better!
  • Have a 3-6 inch landing strip covered with
    plastic hardware cloth below entrances
  • Inner partitions (1-4) should be ½ to 1 in.
    apart and covered with plastic hardware cloth or
    roughened manually
  • Ventilation slot 6 in. from bottom of house

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
49
Bat House Construction and Wood Treatment
  • Use plywood, cedar or a combination
  • Exterior of house Apply 3 coats of dark or
    medium colored exterior grade, water-based paint
    or stain
  • Interior of house Apply two coats black,
    exterior grade, water-based stain
  • Caulk all seams

50
Bat House Placement
  • Full all day sun is best- minimum is 6 hours of
    sun exposure a day
  • Place near water if possible
  • Mount house on a pole 15-20 ft. high
  • Make sure entrance is unobstructed

Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
Photo From BCI www.batcon.org
51
Bats That Will Use Bat Houses In Georgia
  • Little brown myotis
  • Southeastern myotis
  • Eastern pipistrelle
  • Big brown bat
  • Evening bat
  • Mexican free-tailed bat

52
Recommended Steps for Bat Management
  • Conduct bat surveys
  • Identify roosts- esp. maternity roosts
  • Provide artificial roosts (bat boxes)
  • Incorporate bat management practices into your
    overall management plan
  • Work with neighboring landowners to provide as
    much habitat as possible
  • Discourage human disturbance of bat roosts
  • Monitor bat populations and make the data
    available to researchers

53
For More Information
  • Bat Conservation International
  • www.batcon.org
  • Buzbees Bat House
  • www.batbox.org
  • Bat CREW
  • www.batcrew.com
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