Monday, June 22, 2015

Have an Eastern Red Bat

Happy Monday! 





First, you get three pictures of this little guy because I got to hold one last night. I was out looking for our cat, who had decided to go under the fence and into a sea of poison ivy, when something rustled in the leaves beside the walking path. It was a bat! With its wings spread out and everything! I picked it up and got a good look at it. It kept its wings spread out, and I could see it's tiny back feet and adorable eyes. It was so, so soft! It's wing looked injured, though, which made me really sad. I thought it had been stepped on because it was so flat, but it actually has fur on its tail. It smacked its chops and blinked, and when I held it up to get a look at the insect eggs in it's ruddy fur, it flew away. I couldn't find it again, or I totally would have brought it in and cared for it. It was so cute!!
(The cat came in of his own accord.)

Second, here's the info:
"The eastern red bat (Lasiurus borealis) is a species of bat from the family Vespertilionidae. ...

Eastern red bats are widespread across eastern North America, with additional records in Bermuda. It is also scarce but widespread throughout many of the Bahamian islands.

Adults are usually dimorphic: males have red hair while females are chestnut-colored with whitish frosting on the tips of the fur.

Like most vespertilionids, eastern red bats are insectivorous. Moths (Lepidoptera) form the majority of the diet, but red bats also prey heavily on beetles (Coleoptera), flies (Diptera), and other insects. Echolocation calls have low minimum frequencies, but calls are highly variable ranging from (35–50 kHz). Eastern red bats are best suited for foraging in open spaces due to their body size, wing shape, and echolocation call structure. ...

Mating likely occurs in late summer or autumn and the sperm is stored in the female's reproductive tract until spring when ovulation and fertilization occurs. In June, females usually give birth to three or four young and then roost with their young until they are weaned. Males roost alone throughout the Summer. High temperature demands associated with gestation and rearing young may limit the northern range for reproductive females. Eastern red bats often roost amongst live or dead leaves on the branches of live hardwood trees, but have also been found using loblolly pine trees in pine plantations.

In late summer, eastern red bats from the northern parts of the range may migrate south for the winter, although little is known about migration routes or overwintering range. In winter, red bats forage for insects on warm nights and even warm days. On warm days during the winter, red bats enter torpor while roosting in the canopy of hardwood or coniferous trees, but during cold bouts they crawl underneath dead leaf litter on the ground and use their furred tail as a blanket."
~Wikipedia.org

P.S. All animals can carry rabies, so don't pick up bats unless you are willing to go get a rabies shot afterwards.