Summer in the Tucson, Green Valley, Oro Valley, Catalina, Saddlebrooke Ranch, Picture Rocks, and other areas of the Sonoran Desert is a time when bats by the 10's of thousands help reduce the insect population and keeps homeowners, visitors, and pets, pretty much protected from mosquitoes. We are blessed to have over 2 dozen species of bats that help us in the summer.
In the evening, if you have the time to park and watch the area around major bridges-over-washes, you will see thousands of bats leave on their evening hunt. If you are sitting on your patio or in your courtyard at dusk, you may also see a few or a group of bats suddenly drop from roof top hideaways and fly off to feed for the night.
Bats in and of themselves, avoid contact with people, pets, and major objects, using sound to navigate and find their food. (Using a technique called echolocation-like ultrasound). Unless a bat encounters netting, is sick, gets lost by inadvertently entering an open garage door, or is one of the species that feeds on grasshoppers, scorpions, centipedes, and crickets on the ground and gets stranded, one rarely sees a single bat isolated and/or away from a common roosting area.
Each summer, 1st Response Wildlife receives calls about a single bat in a business, a home, or from a homeowner that has discovered significant amounts of droppings (guano) beneath a tiled roof, Viga joints (Heavy round timbers/beams that protrude through exterior walls of Santé Fe style homes), or the joints of a wall and exterior ceiling. One of the reasons for calls is that it is pretty common knowledge that bats carry disease-of primary concern, rabies. Since only a licensed Animal Trapper, a representative of Animal Control, or the Arizona Game and Fish Department should deal with bats, it is extremely important that a homeowner or business owner, have bats dealt with professionally.
1st Response Wildlife has years of experience helping homeowners and businesses deal with bats. In many cases, after an evaluation of the situation is completed, education on what the options are to deal with a bat issue is all that is needed. If, however, there is a lone bat in a business or home, or if a homeowner has a significant guano problem, then 1st Response Wildlife has equipment, materials, and techniques that can help remove a single bat and/or encourage a family of bats to find another place to call home.
Pictured below are a few examples of activity where a business or homeowner worked with 1st Response Wildlife to deal with bat problems. (It should be noted that one method bats use to get into small cracks or openings in homes or businesses is to land on a wall and then, using what amounts to small finger nails on the tips of their wings, they will crawl up a wall and squeeze into an opening that, to a homeowner, looks impossible for anything to be able to access.)
Here are a couple of examples where a homeowner had enough bat guano that they wanted to have their family of bats find elsewhere to roost.
Here is an entry point bats were using at the joint where the Viga meets the wall in a Santé Fe style home (Note the flashlight. Peering deep into the entrance, I could see a family of bats roosting.)
Here is a single bat in a business that found its way into the business overnight and the employees found it the next morning.
Here is a close up of that bat (Medium sized) in a transfer container
A Mexican Free Tailed bat (extremely small-can fit into very small cracks) Picture enlarged
If you encounter a bat in your home, business, see a bat on the ground in the daytime; please remember it is best not to touch it! Since bats do carry diseases, primary among them being rabies, make sure you get your pets vaccinated regularly and, for goodness sake, keep any children or others from touching or picking one up. Rabies can be spread by saliva, not just from a bite. Remember, many of the bats we have here in the summer have extremely small mouths and may not be able to actually open their mouth wide enough to bite a medium or larger animal, or even an adult finger. However, if a child, person, or an animal finds a sick bat and handles or plays with it, the saliva can be transferred and cause serious problems. In the case of a pet, particularly one that has not been vaccinated for rabies, the saliva from the pet’s mouth can mix with that of the bat and rabies can be transmitted even more easily. Rabies can be deadly to humans and animals, so bats are not to be taken lightly!
Please call 1st Response Wildlife if you have bats that you find in your home or business, guano under eaves or overhanging roof tiles or Viga.
Thanks for considering 1st Response Wildlife
Josh's Cell (24/7 Hours): 520-260-9517
Josh Waling is a humane Licensed Animal Trapper who catches and releases wildlife, removing animals including bobcats (lince), coyotes, snakes, rattlesnakes (serpiente de cascabel), raccoons (mapache), pack rats, gila monsters (monstruos de gila), rabbits (canejo), owls, bats, pigeons, hawks, ducks, squirrels (ardilla), peacocks, coatimundi (gato solo), skunks (mofeta), exotics, and domestic cats and dogs. He delivers service that is professional and fast and he is available 24/7. Give him a call the next time you hear unusual noises in the attic or crawl spaces in your home or if you see wildlife eating your vegetation, creating nests, and raising their young too close to your pets or children or have an exotic sighting in your neighborhood. 520-260-9517 Thanks!
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.