Earth in Transition
November 2014
[Ed. Note: Please also read Bat Numbers Plummet in White-nose Caves and Bat White Nose Syndrome Spreading Fast Across The US about the devastation happening to bats. Also read Bats Recognize The Individual Voices Of Other Bats to learn more about these amazing beings! For more detailed information about bats, consistently visit Bat Conservation International.]
Scientists estimate economic value, but they’re
priceless.
The best insect-control operation in the United States is worth nearly $4
billion a year to farmers, but costs nothing to run. It’s available all
across the country, but you won’t find it in the Yellow Pages. It’s highly
effective, yet uses no sprays, chemicals or machinery.
White-Nosed Syndrome (WNS), which has now reached deep into western states,
too, is a fungus that causes bats to wake up early from hibernation and use
up fat reserves and water. Disoriented, they fly around and eventually
starve, freeze or die of dehydration.
Brazilian free-tailed bats head out from their homes in Texas at sunset to
catch insects.
Photo by Paul Ryan/USGS
The best insect-control operation in the United States is worth nearly $4
billion a year to farmers, but costs nothing to run. It’s available all
across the country, but you won’t find it in the Yellow Pages. It’s highly
effective, yet uses no sprays, chemicals or machinery. And this service not
only keeps the insect population stable; it also performs other invaluable
services to farmers and the crops they tend.
We’re talking about bats.
Forget Count Dracula; bats are our friends. Every night, across the country
and around the world, these aerobatic wonders emerge from within caves,
under bridges, inside empty buildings to swoop through the skies, catching
and eating insects by the millions and billions. A single little brown bat
can eat up to 1,000 mosquito-sized insects in a single hour.
They’re a critical link in the balance of nature, ensuring that our food
crops are not devastated by insect swarms.
Bats are also major crop pollinators – as important as bees. They’re
essential to bananas, avocados, dates, figs, peaches, and many more plants.
And just as a condition known as Colony Collapse Disorder is endangering
bees, bats are also under serious threat. In their case, the problem is a
condition known as white-nose syndrome (WNS) that was first noticed five
years ago in northeastern states. WNS, which has now reached deep into
western states, too, is a fungus that causes bats to wake up early from
hibernation and use up fat reserves and water. Disoriented, they fly around
and eventually starve, freeze or die of dehydration.
The little brown bat is most affected by white-nose syndrome
A new study, The Economic Importance of Bats, warns that loss of bats in
North America would have catastrophic consequences, and that we all need to
know how important they are and what we can do to protect them. Already in
the Northeast, bats are down by 70 percent, and one species most affected by
white-nose syndrome, the little brown bat, is set to disappear from the
Northeast altogether within the next 20 years.
“People often ask why we should care about bats,” said Paul Cryan, a U.S.
Geological Survey research scientist and one of the study’s authors. “This
analysis suggests that bats are saving us big bucks by gobbling up insects
that eat or damage our crops. It is obviously beneficial that insectivorous
bats are patrolling the skies at night above our fields and forests – these
bats deserve help.”
Another challenge for bats is the growing number of wind turbines. These may
be an important new source of energy, but in 2007, Tom Kuntz, one of the
authors of the new study, estimated that in the mountainous region of the
Mid-Atlantic Highlands alone, up to 111,000 bats will soon be dying each
year by flying into wind turbines or from the pressure changes bats
experience when flying near the turbine blades as they turn.
A spotted bat in New Mexico.
Photo by Paul Cryan/USGS
“We hope that our analysis gets people thinking more about the value of
bats and why their conservation is important,” said Gary McCracken, a
University of Tennessee professor and co-author of the analysis. “The bottom
line is that the natural pest-control services provided by bats save farmers
a lot of money.”
Another bottom line is that the demise of the bats will drive farmers to use
far greater quantities of pesticides, with all the consequent ripple effects
on the plants, on other animals, and on our own health.
So while the new study stresses the economic impact of the decline of bats,
with its estimates of the value of their insect control services, the
scientists acknowledge that they have taken this approach in order primarily
to get the attention of policy makers and the general public.
The value of bats to the whole ecosystem is far greater than what can be
given a dollar value. They’re dying off by the millions, yet there’s no way
of projecting the true impact of their loss.
What do you say? Have you ever seen a swarm of bats? A bat cave? A bat who’s
flown into your home? Are you scared of bats? Let us know with a comment
below or on Zoe's Facebook page.
What you can do: Our favorite bat protection organization is Bat
Conservation International. You can support their efforts and discover
lots of good things to do for bats in your own neighborhood, like installing
a bat house. And you can visit some amazing bat viewing sites – some of the
best are in Texas.
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