These resources are brought to you by the Cooperative Extension System and your Local Institution

Check out the news from the land grant university in your area.

Bats Targeted for New Housing

Last Updated: April 06, 2008 Related resource areas: Science, Engineering, and Technology for Youth

View as web page


Hundreds of permanent, long-time bat residents of the Louisiana State AgCenter’s Grant Walker 4-H Educational Center are being treated to brand new housing, thanks to 4-H’ers.

Released April 2, 2008

POLLOCK, La. -– Hundreds of permanent, long-time residents of the LSU AgCenter’s Grant Walker 4-H Educational Center are being treated to brand new housing, thanks to the efforts of 4-H’ers.

The residents are bats, and the new housing is bat boxes. 4-H’ers built the boxes as a project for Youth Wetlands Week, March 31-April 4.

Bats are critical to the camp’s natural and human environment, according to Margaret Frey, LSU AgCenter agent in St. Martin Parish. They help keep the mosquito population under control, the natural resources expert said. One bat can eat from 500 to 1,000 mosquitoes per hour.

Because the bats’ favorite insect thrives in the camp’s creeks, woods and marshy areas, bat study and box construction became a natural project for wetland awareness.

The connection might be lost on the bats, however. The problem is the flying mammals rather like their current residence – a large, covered, open-air pavilion. And what bat wouldn’t? It has all the desired amenities – protection from the elements (while still part of nature), safe nesting places and easy access to food and water.

Unfortunately, campers find the pavilion desirable for many of the same reasons. But they’re not fond of walking through or around the bats’ nightly droppings known as guano. Nor do they find the urea scent particularly pleasant.

To help lure the bats to their new dwellings, Frey will plant the kinds of flowers the bats like to feed on along with some inviting scents at the base of the boxes.

“At this point, we hope for success, but we just don’t know. The bats really like where they’re living now,” Frey said. She expects that some kind of barrier will have to be put on the pavilion to further direct the bats towards their alternative housing.

The 4-H’ers assembled the bat houses from kits made and donated by Wayne Gilmore, a 4-H woodworking leader in Opelousas. Gilmore prepared the kits following instructions from Bat Conservational International and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

Frey made a permanent record of the wetlands project with an engraved plaque recognizing Gilmore in particular and the 4-H participants in general.

4-H is the youth development program of the U.S. land-grant university system. It is operated throughout Louisiana by the LSU AgCenter.

-30-

http://www.lsuagcenter.com/en/communications/news/headline_news/Bats+targeted+for+new+housing.htm

Contact: Margaret Frey, (337) 332-2181, mfrey@agcenter.lsu.edu

Mark Claesgens, (225) 578-2939, mclaesgens@agcenter.lsu.edu


Have a specific question? Try asking one of our Experts

Unlike most other resources on the web, we have experts from Universities around the country ready to answer your questions.

Comments

Post a comment about this topic

Please keep comments on topic. To ask a question, please use Ask an Expert. All comments are held for moderation. Comments that include profanity, personal attacks or other inappropriate material will not be posted to the site.

Did you find this page useful?

No one has rated this article yet. Why not be the first?

what is this?
not useful
very useful
 1  2  3  4  5