The United States is the largest known market for trade in these unique orange-and-black bats, who are native to South and Southeast Asia. Their populations are declining, and their biggest threat is overcollection for decor. In recent years the United States has imported many hundreds of painted bats directly from the wild. In fact in just 12 weeks, a new study found 215 listings for painted woolly bats on Amazon, eBay, and Etsy alone. That's not OK.
SIGN and SHARE: Tell Amazon, Etsy, and eBay to stop selling painted woolly bats so their populations can again flourish in the wild — where they belong.
Whether they’re sold pinned in display cases or crammed into tiny
fake coffins, painted woolly bats are collected from the wild to be
killed, stuffed, and hung on walls thousands of miles from their
homes.
The United States is the largest known market for trade in these
unique orange-and-black bats, who are native to South and Southeast
Asia. Their populations are declining, and their biggest threat is
overcollection for decor. In recent years the United States has
imported many hundreds of painted bats directly from the wild.
In fact in just 12 weeks, a new study found 215 listings for painted
woolly bats on Amazon, eBay, and Etsy alone. That’s not OK.
And the problem isn’t new — researchers have been raising
conservation concerns about the hunting and sale of taxidermy bats
as decor for almost a decade. Painted bats are especially vulnerable
to collection because they only have one baby bat at a time, so
they’ll have trouble bouncing back once populations are even more
depleted.
Beyond being breathtakingly beautiful, these bats play an important
role within their ecosystem and for people, consuming insects around
fields and providing natural pest control wherever they go. With the
extinction crisis worsening every day, the world can’t afford to
lose this or any other irreplaceable species.
These special animals aren’t knickknacks. They’re much more
magnificent alive and thriving for generations to come.