How to Attract Bats to Bat House
How can I catch a bat living in the basement of our partially built home?
we have never seen him, only droppings in the same area for two months. Called a professional and he said he could do nothing until the house is completly closed up. We still are waiting for siding and soffit and facia. Getting kind of nervous!!
I’m thinking of getting of of those bat house to help alleviate the mosquito problem?
Out of curiosity how do bats pick a place to stay, do they always use a bat house if one puts it up?
Why dont I have bats in my bat house?
We bought a bat house about a month ago, and put it out back on a tree, we cannot put it on our house, it is near a water source and gets the required amount of sunlight, so why are there no bats in it? we just seen one flying around our porch last night, so we know that we have them, should the bat house be moved out front to where they were seen, or will they find it eventually? please let us know.
Thanks Again.
Natural Pest Bat Control
Considered to be pests by many folks, bats do hold a special and beneficial place in the ecosystem. When bats are nesting in your home them bat control is important and natural bat control is even better. Most species of bats found in North America are not harmful to people or animals and bats do help control insect pests like mosquitoes, eating many thousands of the biting insects during an average nights feeding, perhaps as many as six hundred mosquitoes an hour. On the downside, many bats can carry rabies and can occasionally pass the rabies virus along to humans through a bite or if an animal comes in contact with a dead bat. In general, we have little to fear from these furry fliers though having them take up residence in or around your home can prove to be a nuisance.
Like many small animal pests, bats like to nest in a comfortable environment and holes or other points of entry in the exterior of your home can be an open invitation for bats to nest. Large numbers of bats may find an undisturbed barn or other outbuilding an inviting place to sleep during the day. If you are concerned about the presence of bats around your home there are ways to control bats that do not involve the use of chemicals or that would otherwise harm the bat.
One way to control bats naturally is to pay attention to where they live. Give them an alternative house to your home or outbuildings. Bat houses can be an effective, inexpensive and fun way to provide the bats with a suitable habitat while you enjoy the benefit of having them around to control flying insect pests.
A quick look on the internet or at your local nursery or home improvement store will yield any number of designs for bat houses. Bat houses can be purchased complete or you can make them yourself. Getting the kids involved in the construction of your bat houses can be both fun and educational. Since many stories and mythology put bats in bad repute, humans often develop an unjustified fear of bats. Making use of bat houses is a great way for kids and adults to allay those fears. There are literally dozens of designs used in the construction of bat houses and it is important to find a design that is based on the most up-to-date knowledge of bats and their behavior patterns. A poorly designed bat house may not only fail to solve your bat problem, it may result in unnecessary harm to the bat and increase the likelihood of the bats being exposed to and spreading diseases and parasites.
Many experts advocate the use of an open-bottom design for bat houses. An open-bottom design helps to reduce or eliminate the accumulation of bat guano and parasites. For those of you unfamiliar with the term, guano is the fecal waste the bats produce. There is a thriving business in harvesting bat guano and using it as fertilizer. There is debate among some experts on whether the color of the bat matters to the bat. In fact, a dark color may help to retain heat and make the house more inviting to the bats. If you decide to build your own bat house avoid using recycled or treated wood. Treated wood may contain chemicals harmful bats, people and pets. Not knowing the source of recycled wood means not knowing if the wood has been exposed to harmful chemicals.
Bat Control And Bat Removal
There are many different species of bats. However, you are not likely to spot many of these, as several are rare of endangered. They have good vision, and supplement it with echolocation in order to catch insects in the air. Their flight is excellent, and they have great control in the air. Their wings are made up of what are essentially arms and very long fingers with membrane stretched between. Bats use their hind feet to hang upside down. Some bats roost in trees and vegetation, but some bats like to form large groups and live inside buildings.
The bats that roost inside buildings, often in large numbers, can cause a number of problems. Some people are uncomfortable living with many of these creatures of the night. Even though bats are gentle animals, they do unfortunately carry diseases, and like all animals, produce waste. Many buildings are befouled with the very strong odor of bat droppings and urine. Worse than the odor, these droppings are a bio-hazard to the building they are in. Fungus often grows on the droppings the spores of which can cause lung diseases in people. Bats can also carry a number of parasites, and of course are one of the animals known to carry and transmit rabies.
Bats may look large when they fly, but they can squeeze into, and prefer to squeeze into, very small gaps, usually of less than an inch, and as little as 3/8 inch. They usually stay year round, but sometimes migrate, and then the entire colony returns every year to the same area, and grows larger and larger. These colonies can eventually reach several thousand members.
Bat control work should not be attempted by amateurs. Most bat elimination systems ensure that all of the bats are safely removed from the building, and that they will never return. Many ignorant pest control companies attempt to do bat work, and they often resort to illegal, inhumane, and ineffective methods to try to solve the problem, such as the use of “bat poison”, or simply sealing them in a building to die and stink without safely getting them out first. They are very valuable animals. They only give birth to one or two young a year depending on species, they live up to 20 years, and they eat thousands of insects a night. They are not lowly creatures, and should be treated with respect.
Do not try to pick up a bat yourself, particularly if it is lethargic or looks sick – this is often how rabies is transmitted. A bat in a house can bite a person, and its teeth are so small, the person might not even wake or know about it.
Some Bats are protected in many states and should never be killed or harmed. Harming a protected bat carries severe fines and possibly jail time!
If you have a bat colony roosting inside of your building a bat control professional should be contacted to assess the situation and give an estimate for a removal and exclusion program. As with any animal living inside your home or office special care and proper knowledge is required to safely and humanely remove bats from within the structure.
Bats are territorial and they will normally stay in your area once they have been excluded. If the building has not been properly sealed, the bats will enter another opening in the same building. Bats only need an opening that is ¼ inch by 1½ inch, the thickness of a standard number two pencil.
Bat control is a unique field. It requires specialized training and techniques, attention to detail, and extensive knowledge of bat biology and behavior.
Effective bat control requires a full site inspection, and 100% of the structure must be properly sealed, including gaps as small as ¼” wide. Once the bats are removed exclusion work must be done to prevent the bats from returning to the roost site. If pesticides are used for bat control, the applicator would be in violation of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) and possibly subject to a $25,000 fine.
After the bats have been removed from a structure proper clean-up of the bat guano is the next step. After a few years, the old guano that has accumulated may develop and grow a fungal spore. If the guano is not properly removed occupants of the building may subject themselves to possible contraction of histoplasmosis.