ChatterBank24 mins ago
Going batty
7 Answers
My ten year old daughter complained recently of 'crickets' keeping her awake, which is impossible where we live. I have heard a similar sound in the early hours on two occasions, and this morning our cat brought us a 'gift', a small bat:: is it at all possible bats are responsible for the unusual nocturnal noises? All help much appreciated.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Not just the bats their habitat is also protected. If they are in your roof space it will be registered as a bat roost. It is most probably a breeding colony of females and their young together with immature males. Several years ago a neighbour had them and the bat conservationist came and caught one in a net to weigh it and she had a sonic sound thingy so she could count them leaving the roost at dusk to hunt for food she counted 120 some of the females stay behind and look after the babies in a creche.
Bats DO help with the environment...
The foods that bats eat make bats crucial to the preservation of most of the Earth's ecosystems. Insect-eating bats typically consume about half their own weight in insects during a night's hunting. Without this occurring, the insect population could explode, threatening crops and the balance of nature. Bats that eat fruit disperse small seeds in their droppings, sometimes scattering them in locations far from the parent plant. Because many fruit-eating bats live in tropical areas, they play a vital role in maintaining such habitats as rain forests. Bats that eat nectar and/or pollen, carry pollen from flower to flower, helping to pollinate plants. Pollination makes it possible for the plant to produce fertile seeds that grow into new plants.
They hardly ever carry rabies either. Only 2 cases, in 1966 and 2002 were bats found to carry the EBLV 2 virus. Rabies-carrying bats are usually found abroad, have little contact with people and don't nest in houses.
The foods that bats eat make bats crucial to the preservation of most of the Earth's ecosystems. Insect-eating bats typically consume about half their own weight in insects during a night's hunting. Without this occurring, the insect population could explode, threatening crops and the balance of nature. Bats that eat fruit disperse small seeds in their droppings, sometimes scattering them in locations far from the parent plant. Because many fruit-eating bats live in tropical areas, they play a vital role in maintaining such habitats as rain forests. Bats that eat nectar and/or pollen, carry pollen from flower to flower, helping to pollinate plants. Pollination makes it possible for the plant to produce fertile seeds that grow into new plants.
They hardly ever carry rabies either. Only 2 cases, in 1966 and 2002 were bats found to carry the EBLV 2 virus. Rabies-carrying bats are usually found abroad, have little contact with people and don't nest in houses.