- Codes, Regulations
- Disaster, Emergencies
- Disposal - Sewage
- Disposal - Waste, Pollution
- Emergency Planning
- Food Protection
- Children with Special Needs
- Lead Hazards
- Healthy Neighborhood Program
- Nursing Division
- Public Water Supply
- Rabies, Pest Control
- Animal Bites
- Rabies Prevention
- Bats
- Bed Bugs - Residences, Temp and Other
- The Community LOOW Project
- Tattoo/Body Piercing/Permanent Make-up
- Tobacco Prevention
Bats
There are more than 1,100 different species of bats in the world, living on every continent except Antarctica. Each one has developed special adaptations for how it lives and what it eats. For example, 70% of all the bats in the world eat insects and many of them use echolocation in order to find food and move around in the dark. Many small insectivorous bats can eat up to 2,000 mosquito-sized insects in one night. These bats are able to eat so much because they have high metabolisms and expend lots of energy in flight.
Bats are beneficial. Worldwide, bats are a major predator of night-flying insects, including pests that cost farmers billions of dollars annually. Throughout the tropics, seed dispersal and pollination activities by bats are vital to rain forest survival. In addition, studies of bats have contributed to medical advances including the development of navigational aids for the blind.
Common to our area are the big brown bat and the little brown bat. These bats consume a wide variety of insects from mayflies to beetles to mosquitoes.
Contact With Bats
If you are bitten by a bat -- or if infectious material (such as saliva)
from a bat gets into your eyes, nose, mouth, or a wound -- wash the affected
area thoroughly and get medical advice immediately. Whenever possible, the
bat should be captured and sent to a laboratory for rabies testing.
People usually know when they have been bitten by a bat. However, because
bats have small teeth which may leave marks that are not easily seen, there
are situations in which you should seek medical advice even in the absence
of an obvious bite wound. For example, if you awaken and find a bat in your
room, see a bat in the room of an unattended child, or see a bat near a mentally
impaired or intoxicated person, seek medical advice and have the bat tested.
People cannot get rabies just from seeing a bat in an attic, in a cave, or
at a distance. In addition, people cannot get rabies from having contact
with bat guano (feces), blood, or urine, or from touching a bat on its fur
(even though bats should never be handled!).
Capturing a Bat
If a bat is present in your home and you cannot rule out the possibility
of exposure, leave the bat alone and contact an animal-control agency for
assistance. If professional help is unavailable, use precautions to capture
the bat safely, as described below.
What you will need:
- leather work gloves (put them on)
- small box or coffee can
- piece of cardboard
- tape
When the bat lands, approach it slowly, while wearing the gloves, and place
the box or coffee can over it. Slide the cardboard under the container to
trap the bat inside. Tape the cardboard to the container securely, and punch
small holes in the cardboard, allowing the bat to breathe. Contact your health
department or animal-control authority to make arrangements for rabies testing.
If you see a bat in your home and you are sure no human or pet exposure has
occurred, confine the bat to a room by closing all doors and windows leading
out of the room except those to the outside. The bat will probably leave
soon. If not, it can be caught, as described, and released outdoors away
from people and pets.
Keeping Bats Out of Your Home
Some bats live in buildings, and there may be no reason to evict them if
there is little chance for contact with people. However, bats should always
be prevented from entering rooms of your home. For assistance with "bat-proofing" your
home, contact an animal-control or wildlife conservation agency. If you choose
to do the "bat-proofing" yourself, here are some suggestions. Carefully
examine your home for holes that might allow bats entry into your living
quarters. Any openings larger than a quarter-inch by a half-inch should be
caulked. Use window screens, chimney caps, and draft-guards beneath doors
to attics, fill electrical and plumbing holes with stainless steel wool or
caulking, and ensure that all doors to the outside close tightly.
Additional "bat-proofing" can prevent bats from roosting in attics
or buildings by covering outside entry points. Observe where the bats exit
at dusk and exclude them by loosely hanging clear plastic sheeting or bird
netting over these areas. Bats can crawl out and leave, but cannot re-enter.
After the bats have been excluded, the openings can be permanently sealed
Additional things to keep in mind:
- During summer, many young bats are unable to fly. If you exclude adult bats during this time, the young may be trapped inside and die or make their way into living quarters. Thus, if possible, avoid exclusion from May through August.
- Most bats leave in the fall or winter to hibernate, so these are the best times to "bat-proof" your home.



