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Get rid of pesky insects by lending helping hand to bats

As bats return to summer roost sites from winter hibernation, the Wisconsin DNR reminds Wisconsinites to remove bats safely and humanely. Now through May 31, before the nursing and baby bat protection period begins, bats can be kept out of homes and buildings by following best practices.

The DNR’s Wisconsin Bat Program website offers doit- yourself instructions and information on hiring a professional to remove bats humanely, through a process called exclusion.

Exclusion includes sealing a building, except for primary exits, which are outfitted with one-way doors that let bats exit and prevent re-entry.

“While the goal of the DNR’s bat program is to protect bats and bat habitat, we understand that bats don’t need to share living spaces with humans,” said Heather Kaarakka, DNR conservation biologist.

Exclusions are prohibited June 1-Aug. 15, to protect Wisconsin’s little brown and big brown bats during their maternity seasons. Exclusions occurring during this period will separate mothers from their flightless pups, leaving the pups to die of starvation and potentially exacerbating the homeowners’ bat problem.

“Frantic mothers searching for an opening to reach their pups may enter your living space and be more difficult to deal with, than what you started with,” said Kaarakka. “By trapping the flightless young inside, you also may have created another unexpected problem – the smell of dead animals.”

Effective exclusion efforts should target time periods in the spring and fall, where temperatures are consistently above 50° F, as bats are generally active at temperatures above that level.

To permanently and humanely evict bats from structures, one-way venting devices should be installed at the primary entries/exits for seven to 10 days, in addition to sealing up secondary holes, cracks and crevices that may allow entry into a structure. Primary entries should be closed after a oneway venting device has been in place for seven to10 days.

Little brown bats and big brown bats, along with northern long-eared bats and eastern pipistrelles (also known as tricolored bats), are all threatened species in Wisconsin and receive legal protection, including the ban on exclusions during maternity seasons.

These four bat species, which hibernate in caves and mines in the winter, have been decimated by deadly whitenose syndrome.

Although bat roosts are protected during the maternity period, exclusions may be completed if the landowner feels the bats pose a health or safety risk to humans. Exclusions may be completed in the summer, by submitting a health exemption form.

Exclusions are allowed during the maternity season in hospitals, medical clinics, daycare centers, nursing homes, assisted living facilities and restaurants without a health exemption form.

White-nose syndrome does not affect humans, but causes a fungus to grow on bats’ noses and skin, disrupting normal hibernation patterns and burning up the energy needed to get them through long Wisconsin winters.

Winter 2020 surveys, show that white-nose syndrome reduced bat populations in some hibernation sites, with smaller populations to zero bats, and reduced populations at other sites by 72 to 97 percent from their average populations, before the arrival of white-nose syndrome.

Bats can reduce pesky mosquitoes and night-flying insects around the home, and garden. Help keep these valuable mammals in the area, by building a house for roosting and to raise their young.

Late winter/early spring is a good time to provide an alternative roost – a bat house – in the general vicinity of where bats enter the building. To find a supply list, instructions and how-to videos, visit at dnr.wisconsin.gov.

“As bats come and go, they’ll become familiar with the structure and are more likely to take up residence there, after they’ve been excluded from a building,” said DNR ecologist J. Paul White. “By installing a bat house before you exclude bats, you increase the odds of maintaining the beneficial insect-eating service the bats provide in your backyard.”

A single bat can eat up to 1,000 mosquito-sized insects an hour and the equivalent of its bodyweight every night.

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