The benefits of bats and birds

Wed. Jul. 20, 2022

Click below to listen to my 2 min. Garden Bite radio show/podcast: The benefits of bats and birds

While some may scoff, bats have benefits.  You may not feel that way as you battle one inside your bedroom, however, before killing it, capture it and set it free.  Then look for the place in the bats are coming in and seal it up!

Is this you????

A bat in the house? What to do by Wildlife Removal USA.

Let’s talk about what bats DO do… not what you’re thinking! This is the good stuff about bats.

  • North American species prefer to dine on insect pests, particularly bloodsucking mosquitoes.
  • A single bat can eat up to 1,000 mosquito-sized insects every hour, usually eating 6,000 to 8,000 insects each night.
  • One bat house can hold 25 bats. That’s more than 150,000 insects eaten every night!
baby bat on a finger

The Future of Bats – more information from the University of Minnesota.

Bats of Minnesota 

Saving Wisconsin’s bats

Jewel Cave bats in South Dakota

Pennsylvania Bats at Risk

How about building them their own home OUTSIDE of your home?  Resources for plans:

Free bat-house plans

Build a bat-house

Wis DNR bathouse
Baby bat from boredpanda.com

Yes, I’m trying to woo you with the CUTE pictures because sometimes bats look scary…

he’s kinda cute

There’s another benefit, they’re great nighttime pollinators for your garden.  Since bats are threatened with extinction, adding them to your garden is good environmental stewardship.  While bats eat thousands of mosquitoes, many birds will eat mosquitoes, too.

Other voracious ‘squiter eaters:

  • barn swallows
  • purple martins
  • robins
  • chickadees
  • nuthatches
  • woodpeckers
Purple martins breed during the summer months in much of the country
Red-headed woodpecker in snag

Attract more bug eaters by installing bird houses, filling feeders with a variety of seed, supplying a clean source of water and planting flowers and trees that supply food and shelter.  And stop using chemicals. And check out feedthebirds.com for more information and locally milled seed blends. Bird seed, delivered!