DNR News
** Archived Article - please check for current information. **
February 28, 2012
Remember bats are mammals that should be protected
Recent incidents where bats have been discovered in schools, causing the schools to be closed briefly while bats were excluded, have clouded the many positive reasons for encouraging bats to stay around.
Bats are nature’s pest patrol and the major predator of night-flying insects, according to Mary Bunch, biologist with the S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR). All of South Carolina’s bats are insect-eaters, and since bats forage for several hours a night, a single colony can provide significant local control for flying insects, including mosquitoes.
Since bats are such an important natural form of insect pest control, feasting on agricultural pests such as corn borers, June bugs, gypsy moths, grain moths, cutworm moths, potato beetles and even grasshoppers, it is in our own best interests to protect them, Bunch said. Yet many of the nation’s bat species are currently on state or federal endangered species lists.
What can people do to help? Avoid disturbing maternity colonies and hibernating bats—even slight disturbance is harmful‑and never shoot, poison or otherwise harm bats. Nuisance bats can be encouraged to move elsewhere without killing them. The DNR maintains an updated referral list of South Carolina pest/animal control operators who do non-lethal bat exclusion work. This list is also available at local Clemson Extension Service and animal control offices.
“Bat exclusion is the only effective way to evict unwanted bats,” Bunch said, “and it doesn’t require the use of any chemicals. In fact, there are no effective bat repellents. Exclusion uses one-way exits; bats leave to forage in warm weather, and when they return, they can’t get back in.” Exclusion should be done in spring or fall. Some of the companies on the bat exclusion referral list also remove bat guano.
Bat houses provide shelter for bats and are becoming increasingly popular as the public becomes more aware of the beneficial nature of bats. Bat boxes are available in many lawn and garden stores, and do-it-yourselfers can build a good one relatively cheaply. If you build your own be certain to keep the roof and joints well-sealed.
Some societies hold bats in high regard. In China, the word for bat is “fu,” and the same word means happiness or good luck. In Chinese art, bats are frequently used to symbolize happiness.
Bats have more in common with humans than most people realize. Like humans, bats are mammals; they have hair, give birth to living young and feed them on milk from mammary glands. The bones in a bat’s wing are like those of the human arm and hand, although bat finger bones are elongated and connected by a double membrane of skin to form the wing. Bats even have thumbnails.
Despite our similarities, humans overall have not been kind to bats. Drastic reductions in bat populations have occurred during recent years in the United States and worldwide, and the reasons look disturbingly familiar: habitat destruction, direct killing, disturbance of hibernating and maternity colonies and the use of pesticides. White-Nose Syndrome, a fungus that has killed 5 million bats in North America, may have been introduced by humans. White-Nose Syndrome may soon reach South Carolina—it was found in neighboring Transylvania County, N.C., in 2011.
More News
- Spring turkey hunters should order tags now for upcoming season
- Adult-youth fishing open at Bonneau Ferry
- Remember bats are mammals that should be protected
- Thermal thinning and pruning with prescribed fire benefits longleaf pine stands
- Eighth Eastern Native Grass Symposium set Oct. 1-4, 2012 in Charlottesville, Va.
- Spring turkey season forecast fair; youth day March 31
- Renowned herpetologist featured at Palmetto Sportsmen's Classic March 23-25
- Archaeological excavations open at Great Pee Dee March 5
- Three states add bass fishing as high school varsity sport: Will S.C. follow suit?
- Harry Hampton Wildlife Fund donates $104,050 to DNR
- Aiken County wildlife area will open to the public four Saturdays in March
- Prescribed burns planned at Forty Acre Rock Preserve in Lancaster County
- Camp Wildwood of South Carolina open for 2012 registration
- Freshwater fishing trends
- Saltwater fishing trends
- S.C. weekly tidetable
- DNR video