Evening
Bat
The evening bat is an abundant bat throughout the
southeastern United States, northward to the
upper Midwest and Ontario. It ranges along the
Atlantic seaboard south throughout Florida to
Veracruz, Mexico. A true forest bat, the evening
bat is almost never encountered in caves. It
forms nursery colonies in hollow trees, behind
loose bark, and sometimes in buildings and
attics. Some of these maternity colonies are
quite large, containing several hundred
individuals. Evening bats emerge soon after dusk
and forage on a large array of small nocturnal
insects including flying ants, spittle bugs, June
beetles, Japanese beetles and moths. In the fall,
evening bats store large amounts of fat
indicating a lengthy migration to southern parts
of its range. In a banded bat recovery study,
bats were found as far as 547 kilometers south of
their banding sites. Yet, little research has
been done to learn exact migration movements of
this species. They have not ever been found
hibernating in local caves and appear to simply
disappear from their summer habitat. Once these
bats have arrived at their over-wintering sites,
they are thought to remain active throughout the
winter.
Visit Coveside
Bird Houses to see our selection of Bat
Houses
|