bat box

Evening Bats

For 5 years now my wife and I have enjoyed the presence of bats in a “Rocket house” built by a customer–friend that traded it to me for some bags of birdseed. I have to say I got the better end of that deal. Those bags of birdseed are long gone, however, the bat box is a source of fun and interest between March and October as our bat population has grown to over 250 now.

Only this spring we learned they are known as Evening bats, Nycticeius Humeralis. We were able to connect with a person from the Tennessee Nature Conservancy who came to our home to observe the bats exiting the box. He filmed them and used a sound device that records and translates their “calls” to sonograms. Each bat species’ call has a unique and identifiable sonogram. During his visit we counted approximately 150 bats leaving the box.

Then came the night of June 9th and we were watching the bats emerge when we saw something fall from the box and not fly. Upon a closer look I was shocked to discover a baby bat, perhaps just a day or two old clinging to the post the box is mounted on. We suspected but now had proof our colony of bats are females raising babies.

Baby Evening Bat.

The Evening bat is an abundant bat throughout the southeastern US, north to the upper Midwest and Ontario, and along the Atlantic seaboard into Florida.

The evening bat is almost never encountered in caves and is considered a forest bat. It forms nursery colonies in hollow trees, sometimes in buildings and attics, and fortunately for us, in bat houses. Some maternity colonies are quite large, containing several hundred individuals. Evening bats emerge soon after dusk and forage on a large array of small nocturnal insects including flying ants, Japanese beetles, June beetles, and moths. Take note mosquitos were not mentioned. While they may eat mosquitos when encountered, bats are typically feeding at a more elevated level while mosquitos are closer to ground level.

In the fall, evening bats store large amounts of fat for a potentially lengthy migration to southern parts of their range. In a banded bat recovery study, evening bats were found as far as 300 miles south of their banding sites. Still, little research has been done to learn the exact migration movements of this species. The bats have not been found hibernating in local caves and simply disappear from their summer habitat. Once these bats have arrived at their wintering sites, they are thought to remain active throughout the winter.

Breeding occurs in the fall, and delayed fertilization allows for the birth of 1-2 young in late May through June. Young begin to fly after 3 weeks but continue to nurse until 6 to 9 weeks.

On another recent evening as we watched the bats emerge one flew directly toward us somewhat awkwardly and as if it realized it had made a mistake crash landed onto the deck between us.

The picture is the young bat aside a quarter I placed next to it for perspective. I assisted the little bat in getting back to the post where it climbed up into the box safely. From our counts earlier in the spring of around 150 to our counts now of over 250 it’s reasonable to conclude we are seeing over 100 offspring. Clearly there is some overcrowding and we are going to add another Rocket house nearby to, hopefully, encourage more. Other bat houses are good, too, and I recommend visiting the websites below to learn more. It’s interesting that the more we learn about these docile, beneficial, creatures the more questions we have. We hope to continue cultivating the success we are experiencing and learn much more in years to come.

Other species of bats seen in TN include Brazilian free-tailed, Eastern pipistrelle, Eastern Red bat, Eastern Small footed, Gray, and Hoary bat.

www.batcon.org www.merlintuttle.org

Bat Houses and Placement Strategies

I have invested a fair amount of time researching bats the last month or so trying to learn more about the fascinating creatures sharing my yard this summer.

After last week’s blog about my recent success with bats a few customers had questions.

One customer asked “why do you think you have more bats this year. What did you do to encourage them”? The fact is I’ve done nothing different and I wish I knew why we have this surge in numbers. The bat house has been in the same place for several years. The only thing about the “Rocket” style house that’s different is Downy woodpeckers have pecked a couple of holes in it ranging in size from about 1 ½” to 3” in diameter. I hardly think that would increase the chances of a box being used.

Bats have to find new roosts on their own. They investigate new roosting opportunities while foraging at night, and they are expert at detecting crevices, cracks, and nooks and crannies that offer shelter from the elements and predators. Bats are not blind as the saying goes but in fact have sharp eye sight.

BCI (Bat Conservation International) indicates 90 percent of occupied bat houses were used within two years (with 50 percent occupancy in the first year). The rest needed three to five years for bats to move in. So, perhaps it was just time needed for bats to locate my house. Now that I’ve attracted bats to this house I am planning on putting up at least one more before next spring.

There's a lot of information about success rates of various types of bat houses and, perhaps more importantly, how they are presented. I am merely going to summarize some of the more pertinent information and would encourage you to visit www.batcon.org if you want to learn more or have enough interest to construct, or buy, a bat house to install in your yard.

Below are some basics of presenting a bat house.

Three chamber bat house.

Rocket style bat house.

Facts, Tips and Suggestions

Bat houses installed on buildings or poles are easier for bats to locate, have greater occupancy rates and are occupied two and a half times faster than those mounted on trees.

Tall designs like the multi-chamber (nursery) and rocket-style houses perform best

Occupancy in rural areas is over 60 percent, compared to 50 percent for urban and suburban areas.

According to BCI maintaining proper roost temperatures is probably the single most important factor for a successful bat house. They say interior temperatures should be warm and as stable as possible (ideally 80º F to 100º F in summer) for mother bats to raise their young. Some species, such as the Big Brown bat, prefer temperatures below 95º F, while others, such as the Little Brown bat, tolerate temperatures in excess of 100º F. This is very interesting because we always think of bats in relation to the coolness of caves but this is mostly during the hibernation months, fall through winter.

Bat house temperatures are influenced directly by the exterior color and direction faced. East-, southeast-, or south-facing are generally good bets. My Rocket house is, as you have seen, a darker color. Bat houses we sell are almost always a plain western cedar. From now on I will suggest staining the box a darker color.

Avoid placing bat houses directly above windows, doors, decks or walkways. Bat urine and guano would fall directly down to whatever is below. The urine is known to stain some finishes.

For more information about constructing, painting, installing and maintaining your bat house, please see:

The Bat House Builder's Handbook

Single chamber bat house plans

Four-chamber nursery house plans

Rocket box bat house plans