Bats Returning to Area for Spring

Bats
This colony of bats returned to find their entry blocked by an exclusion device. The bats eventually relocated. (Courtesy Cape Fear Wildlife Control).

If you suspect bats may be living in your home, biologists at the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission ask that you relocate them responsibly before pup rearing season begins on May 1. 

 Bats hibernate or migrate south during the winter, which is why they usually show up in early spring. They are ecologically and economically valuable, providing free pest control as they nearly devour their own body weight in insects nightly. Their appetite increases even more during pup-rearing season, which runs May 1 – July 31 across North Carolina.

The best eviction methods allow bats out, but not back in, the WRC says.

 “Young bats are initially flightless and are totally dependent on their mothers, so when adult bats are evicted, the young perish because they can’t yet leave the roost or survive on their own,” stated Katherine Etchison, wildlife diversity biologist with the Wildlife Commission. “To make matters worse, mother bats may end up in the living space of a building trying to get to their pups.”

If you are unable to remove bats from your home before rearing season, it is best to leave them in their roost until the end of July. However, you can still ask a Wildlife Control Agent to seal off entryways that lead into your living space to minimize the chance of human interaction. If a bat does enter your living space and human exposure occurs, or might have occurred, contact your county health department immediately.

 By August 1, most young bats are mature enough to fly, so eviction methods are safe to resume at that point. 

The flying mammals leave ample evidence of their presence. Bat scat, called guano, is the most obvious indication that bats may be living in the gable vents, behind a shutter or in another nook around the outside or inside your home. 

Bats return to the same roost each spring, so it’s important to maintain your home after evicting them. You can provide alternative roosting space by installing bat boxes 12 to 20 feet high in a place with at least seven hours of direct sunlight in the summer. For tips on building, buying or installing bat boxes, visit batcon.org/about-bats/bat-houses.

 If you have questions about interactions with bats, contact the Commission’s Wildlife Helpline, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m., at 866-318-2401 or email [email protected].

If they’re getting inside your home, a licensed Wildlife Control Agent can safely evict them for you. You can find a list of licensed professionals on the Wildlife Commission website, ncwildlife.org. In our area, Tommy Raines of Cape Fear Wildlife Control is a licensed bat-exclusion and removal agent.

About Jefferson Weaver 1975 Articles
Jefferson Weaver is the Managing Editor of Columbus County News and he can be reached at (910) 914-6056, (910) 632-4965, or by email at [email protected].