Have you been hearing squeaks? Seeing bats flying around your roof?
You may have bats in your home. This news might freak out a lot of people, but don’t put your house up for sale just yet. It’s easier to cohabit with bats than you’d think.
Why Are They Even There in the First Place?
In a word, roosting. Female bats scout out spots to roost and raise their young way back in the spring. Those babies are usually born between June and August. So if you’ve got bats in your attic at this time of year, there’s a very good chance that there will be babies too. Bats seem to return time and time again to the same maternity roost each year.
I Want Them Gone!
So what happens if you evict bats during the summer? You’re not going to like the answer. When you evict female bats during the summer, you may very well be leaving helpless pups behind to die. If you absolutely must evict bats from your home, the best time to do this is September and October. Whatever you do, don’t send them packing between May and August or over winter.
Is There Another Way?
Yes. Live with them. And here’s why it’s so important that you take a step back and really think about it. So many of Canada’s bats are at-risk. The Tricoloured, Northern Long-eared and Little Brown Bat are all listed by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada as Endangered. The Pallid and Eastern Red Bat are listed as Threatened. While the Fringed, Spotted, Townsends Big-eared, Western Small-footed, Yuma Myotis, and Free-tailed Bat are considered species of Special Concern.
They are at-risk for many reasons, but a big one is habitat loss. They simply don’t have enough places to call home. And considering that their survival relies less on high birth rates and more on high survival rate and they only have one or two pups a year, it’s critical to their survival that they find shelter so that those pups can survive.
How in the World Would I Ever Live With a Bat or … Eeeeep…Bats?
Living with a bat doesn’t mean you have to share a bathroom with it. In fact, you really shouldn’t notice that you’re living with a bat at all. Bats can be relegated to the attic (that’s likely where they’ve been hanging their hat anyway!). By retrofitting your household, you’ll be providing bats with a safe roosting spot. Blockages, partitions, and specific entry/exit points are a few simple retrofits that encourage bats to hang out in a specific area of the attic.
That said, you’ll want to take some precautions to make sure you do this safely. Usually the biggest concern is bat guano. Place a drop sheet down in your attic to capture the guano and clean the sheets one or twice a year to make sure their poop doesn’t affect your health.
6 comments
Hello. This is very good you have done this article about bats. I am always surprised when friends say they’re afraid of bats and don’t want them around their place. We have bats living in our cedar siding and it’s amazing how those little guys can fit into such a snug spot. Bats are not aggressive towards humans. They are shy and elusive and are such an important part of nature.
Gail Lovig
Fanny Bay, B.C. (On Vancouver Island)
They are an amazing group of animals. The first time I found out they were more closely related to lemurs rather than mice, I was blown away!
They are very good keeping down the numbers of mosquitos and for that reason they are very special to me. Apparently a 1000 a minute which is amazing and wonderful especially as the pesky insects zoom in on me at an alarming rate.
They are certainly special to us, too, Frieda! Do you have a bat house installed nearby?
I grew up with bats, my attic bedroom was next to an area where the warm brick chimney was their favourite roosting area. Bats made my life comfortable by keeping mosquitoes out of my bedroom. This was very important as thousands of mosquitoes thrived in a nearby water tank. At the fist whine of a hungry mosquito in my room a bat would arrive and there would be no more problem.
Later, as an adult living in Victoria BC. my family lived in an older home that had a little brown bat colony living in the attic. This is a Gary Oak area, and the trees were suffering a severe infestation of looper moths. Many trees were almost defoliated, but not the trees near our home because the bats ate both the adult moths and the larva that spun a thread to hang down from the trees, a perfect treat for the bats. While people in other areas tried poison sprays etc. to try (not very successfully) to get rid of the caterpillars the bats did this for free. The value of these lovely little animals is unfortunately not known by most people, but their role in insect control is extremely important. Also they guano is wonderful fertilizer. Just the freedom from mosquitoes should convince most people that providing bat habitat is worth doing. Organic and environmentally safe insect control is very valuable.
You could and should have said more to encourage people to save bats and put up bat condos.
That is LOVELY! Thank you for sharing!