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Tennessees Bats

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Title: Tennessees Bats


1
TennesseesBats
2
Brought to you by the Tennessee Bat Working Group
TNBWG Partnership and Communication
3
Tennessee Bat Working Group
  • The people shown holding bats in this
    presentation are wildlife biologists who have
    received rabies pre-exposure shots
  • They are professionals who work to conserve bats
    and other wildlife
  • You should never handle a bat or any other wild
    animal

4
Bat Myths and Facts
5
Myths and Facts
  • Myth Bats are flying rodents
  • Fact Bats are actually more closely related to
    primates than rodents
  • Myth Bats get caught in peoples hair because
    theyre blind as a bat
  • Fact Bats have excellent vision. Combined with
    echolocation they generally dont run into
    things. They wont get in your hair.

6
Myths and Facts
  • Myth All bats carry rabies
  • Fact Less than one half of one percent
  • Myth All bats drink blood
  • Fact Only vampire bats and they dont live here

A colony of common vampire bats.
7
Bat Classification
  • Phylum Chordata
  • Animals with a backbone
  • Subphylum Vertebrata
  • Animals with vertebrate backbone
  • Class Mammalia
  • Hair
  • Live birth and nurse young
  • Order Chiroptera
  • Chiro (Hand) Ptera (Wing )
  • 1,100 species worldwide

8
ChiropteraChiro (Hand) Ptera (Wing )
9
Chiroptera Contains Two Groups
  • Megachiroptera
  • Dont occur in Tennessee
  • Large and live in the Old World tropics
  • They are called flying foxes because their faces
    are fox-like
  • Eat fruit or drink nectar from flowers
  • They use their vision to find food, typically do
    not use echolocation
  • Microchiroptera
  • All Tennessee bats are microchiroptera
  • Small and mostly eat insects
  • Use echolocation to find their food

10
Bat Morphological Adaptations
11
Adaptations flight
  • Bats are the only true flying mammals
  • Other mammals glide, like flying squirrels

Gray bats leaving their roost.
12
Adaptations echolocation
  • Bats emit high frequency sound pulses that help
    them see to move and hunt in the dark
  • Many bats have unusually large ears or odd
    looking structures in their ears to aid in
    echolocation

13
Adaptations cold weather
  • Some species have fur on their tail membrane and
    parts of their wing membrane so they can
    withstand colder weather

Hoary Bat
14
Predator Prey Interactions
  • Insectivores (insect eaters) - all of TNs bats
  • Fruit eaters
  • Nectar feeders 3 species along the US/Mexican
    border in Texas and Arizona
  • Highly specialized
  • Frogs
  • Fish
  • Vampires Mexico, Central, and South America
  • Bats as prey owls, snakes, raccoons, and cats

15
Why are bats important?
  • Control insects (Insectivores)
  • Eat 50 100 of body weight every night
  • Colony of 1,000 bats can consume 22 pounds of
    insects nightly
  • Help control crop pests like beetles and moths as
    well as mosquitoes

16
Why are bats important?
  • Pollination
  • Nectar feeding bats
  • Some tropical flowers bloom only at night and
    have special shapes and scents that attract bats
  • Seed dispersal
  • Fruit eating bats
  • Important for reforestation in the tropics

Lesser long-nosed bat at Hummingbird feeder.
17
Bat Habitats
18
Habitat Summer
  • Roosting - where bats stay during the day
  • Most species of bats segregate into bachelor
    colonies and maternity colonies where the pups
    are raised
  • Some congregate in large or small groups
  • Some roost alone

19
Habitat Summer
  • Roosting locations
  • Trees
  • Hollow trees
  • Under bark
  • Hang from branches
  • Buildings
  • Caves

20
Habitat Summer
  • Foraging - hunting for insects at night
  • Rivers and streams
  • Ponds, swamps, lakes
  • Fields
  • Forests
  • Roads and trails

21
Habitat Winter
  • Hibernation
  • Build stores of fat to make it through the winter
  • Places they hibernate
  • Caves - many bats
  • Trees red bats, silver-haired bats
  • Under leaf litter on the ground red bats
  • Buildings many bats
  • Red and big brown bats will awake on warm winter
    days to feed

22
Habitat Winter
  • Migration
  • Gray bats will migrate great distances to find a
    suitable cave in which to hibernate
  • Silver-haired bats migrate south to hibernate and
    to northern US and Canada in the Summer
  • Hoary bats migrate south for the winter and stay
    active

23
Bat Conservation
24
Tennessee has Two Species of Endangered Bats
  • Gray Bat
  • Indiana bat

25
Reasons for Decline of Gray Bat
  • Habitat loss
  • Cave commercialization
  • Cave flooding
  • Trash in sink holes
  • Disturbance during hibernation run out of fat
    stores before spring and die
  • Disturbance at maternity colony young fall to
    the cave floor and die

26
Reasons for Decline of Indiana Bat
  • Disturbance during hibernation
  • Winter habitat loss
  • Cave commercialization
  • Cave flooding
  • Trash in sink holes
  • Summer habitat loss
  • Loss of roost trees
  • Lack of information about their ecology needed to
    protect the species

27
How can you help bats?
  • Help dispel bat myths
  • Dont disturb hibernating or maternity colonies
    when spelunking (caving)
  • Put up a bat house
  • Maintain wooded buffers around streams and
    wetlands
  • Limit pesticide use
  • Volunteer at a cave gating

28
Cave Gates
  • Protect bats from human disturbance
  • Designed and built so they dont
  • interfere with bats movements
  • change air flow and temperature of cave

29
Tennessee Has 15 Species of Bats
  • Gray bat
  • Indiana bat
  • Northern long-eared bat
  • Little brown bat
  • Southeastern bat
  • Eastern small-footed bat
  • Eastern pipistrelle
  • Big brown bat
  • Evening bat
  • Rafinesques big-eared bat
  • Red bat
  • Seminole bat
  • Hoary bat
  • Silver-haired bat
  • Brazilian free-tailed bat

30
Gray bat
  • 11-13 inch wingspan
  • Only has one pup per year
  • Lives in caves in the summer and winter
  • Travel great distance between caves
  • Endangered species

31
Indiana bat
  • 9-11 inch wingspan
  • Summer in hollow trees, under loose bark
  • Hibernate in caves
  • Only has one pup per year
  • Endangered species

32
Northern long-eared bat
  • 9-11 inch wingspan
  • Summer in barns, old houses, behind shutters,
    under loose bark
  • Hibernate in caves
  • Only has one pup per year

33
Little brown bat
  • 9-11 inch wingspan
  • Females form maternity colonies in barns, old
    houses, and attics
  • Hibernate in caves
  • Only has one pup per year

34
Southeastern bat
  • Species of Concern in TN
  • 9-11 inch wingspan
  • Females form maternity colonies in caves, mines,
    hollow trees
  • Hibernate in caves, mines, buildings
  • Active year round further south
  • Usually has twins

35
Eastern Small-footed bat
  • Species of Concern in TN
  • 8-10 inch wingspan
  • Females form maternity colonies in caves,
    buildings
  • Hibernate in caves and mines
  • Only has one pup per year

36
Eastern pipistrelle
  • 8-10 inch wingspan
  • Lives in trees and caves in the summer
  • Hibernates in caves
  • Usually has twins

37
Big brown bat
  • 13-16 inch wingspan
  • Lives in hollow trees, behind loose bark, barns,
    old houses, and attics
  • Hibernate in caves, mines, and buildings
  • Usually has twins

38
Evening bat
  • 10-11 inch wingspan
  • Lives in hollow trees and old buildings in the
    summer
  • Nobody knows where or if they hibernate
  • Usually has twins

39
Rafinesques big-eared bat
  • Species of Concern in TN
  • 10-12 inch wingspan
  • Lives in hollow trees, old buildings, caves, and
    mines in the summer
  • Hibernate in caves and mines
  • Only has one pup per year

40
Red bat
  • 11-13 inch wingspan
  • Hangs in trees and looks like a brown leaf
  • Hibernates under leaves on the ground
  • Has one to four pups

41
Seminole bat
  • 12 inch wingspan
  • Hangs in trees, under loose bark, mostly in
    Spanish moss
  • Hibernates?
  • Has two to four pups

42
Hoary bat
  • 15-16 inch wingspan
  • Hang in clumps of leaves in trees
  • Northern populations migrate south, sometimes in
    groups
  • Usually has twins

43
Silver-haired bat
  • 10-12 inch wingspan
  • Found in TN in the winter and during Fall/Spring
    migration
  • Summer roosts in Northern States and Canada under
    loose bark, in tree hollows, or abandoned bird
    nests
  • Hibernates in buildings, caves, mines, rock
    crevices, and hollow trees
  • Has one or two pups

44
Brazilian free-tailed bat
  • 11-14 inch wingspan
  • Summer roosts in building behind shutters and in
    attics
  • Not known to hibernate and is probably rare or
    accidental in TN
  • Only has one pup per year

45
Bats and Rabies
46
Rabies
  • NEVER PICK UP OR HANDLE A BAT OR ANY OTHER WILD
    ANIMAL
  • A BAT ON THE GROUND IS A SICK BAT
  • You will feel it when a bat bites you, but some
    people (like small children) may not be able to
    communicate that a bite has occurred
  • A bite may not look serious and may not be
    visible, but it is just as serious as a dog or
    raccoon bite and medical attention should be
    sought

47
What to Do if Bitten
  • Wash the wound thoroughly with soap and water
  • Seek medical attention immediately
  • The following information will help your health
    care provider assess your risk
  • the geographic location of the incident
  • the type of animal that was involved
  • how the exposure occurred (provoked or
    unprovoked)
  • the vaccination status of animal
  • whether the animal can be safely captured and
    tested for rabies

48
Rabies Reality Check
  • About one person a year dies from rabies in the
    United States
  • Chance of getting rabies is less than 1 in 200
    million
  • Things that are more likely to kill you than
    rabies
  • Your dog
  • Bee sting
  • Lightning
  • Your power mower

49
Sources of Information
  • TN Bat Working Group (www.state.tn.us/twra/tnbwg/t
    nbwg.html)
  • Bat Conservation International (www.batcon.org)
  • Choate, J.R., J.K. Jones, Jr., and C. Jones.
    1994. Handbook of Mammals of the South-central
    States. Louisiana State University Press, Baton
    Rouge, Louisiana.
  • Schwartz C.W., and E.R. Schwartz. 1981. The
    Wild Mammals of Missouri. University of Missouri
    Press, Columbia, Missouri. 356 pp.
  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). 1982.
    Gray Bat Recovery Plan. Denver, CO.
  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). 1999.
    Agency Draft Indiana Bat (Myotis sodalis)
    Revised Recovery Plan. USFWS, Ft. Snelling,
    Minnesota.
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