1 / 9

THE INDIANA BAT

THE INDIANA BAT. Indiana Research By: Koryn Greiwe. PHYSICAL FEATURES. One of the smallest bats in the United States, lives for 5 to 9 years Fully grown adult bat 2 1/2 inches in length Bat’s wingspan, (wings from tip to tip) measures 9 to 11 inches looks bigger when flying .

taran
Download Presentation

THE INDIANA BAT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE INDIANA BAT Indiana Research By: Koryn Greiwe

  2. PHYSICAL FEATURES • One of the smallest bats in the United States, lives for 5 to 9 years • Fully grown adult bat 21/2 inches in length • Bat’s wingspan, (wings from tip to tip) measures 9 to 11 inches • looks bigger when flying • Very light in weight, ¼ of an ounce • About the weight of three pennies • Easy to tell apart from other small bats • Body has thin, but fluffy fur that is grayish-brown • Some black on its upper parts, pink underneath • Pink nose, small back feet, short hair • Ears like a mouse

  3. FOOD SOURCE • A mammal, a carnivore, insectivore • Eats flying insects, has sharp teeth • Mayflies, gypsy moths, mosquitoes, beetles • All of these harm forests • Indiana bat is an important part of its ecosystem • Each night, one bat can eat up to 3000 insects, • a colony 100,000 • Helps control number of night flying insects • Better than using poison insecticides • Bats are the only mammals that can fly, how they find food • Locates prey using echolocation • Bat makes a sound which bounces off the flying insects • Sound returns to the bats ears helping it locate prey

  4. HABITAT • Most of the year it lives in other states in Midwest and Northeast • Lives in forests, floodplains, crop fields, and grasslands of other • states in region like Kentucky, Ohio, New York, Missouri, Wisconsin • Migrates to Indiana during cold winter months • That’s why bat got its name • Hibernates in Indiana’s Caves • Caves have necessary conditions bat needs to survive winter • Low enough temperature, but not too cold,won’t freeze to death

  5. BEHAVIORS • Migrates to different environments based on time of year • During the spring, summer, early fall live in colonies in areas • where they can easily feed on flying insects • Live near trees and water, feed at night since nocturnal • Wait until night to feed, less likely to be eaten by predators • like snakes, raccoons, skunks, hawks, and owls. • Stores enough food for body fat to help it survive the winter • During winter migrates to Indiana caves to hibernate • Travel in colonies, some hundreds of miles to reach Indiana • Every year, around September, return to exactly the same caves • Each colony joins other colonies to form tight groups in caves

  6. Hang from their feet from the ceiling of the cave • Bats wake every 8 to 10 days, for an hour • to look for food near caves entrance • Swarm at the entrance to the caves and mate • The females store the sperm from mating in their bodies during the • winter, fertilize their eggs after they are done hibernating • Each female has one baby bat, called a pup • They are born in the summer and drink milk from their mothers • for about 31 days, the time it takes it to fly • The pup joins the colony like of Indiana bats

  7. NOT SO “COOL”, ENDANGERED SPECIES • Indiana bat is special because it is rare • 1967 put on the endangered species list • Today only about half as many bats aswhen it was put on list • Facing extinction for many reasons • People do not leave their habitats alone • Cut down dead trees near cave and water openings • Trees need to be left, a food source • People pollute the waters • Use poisons to kill flying insects • Cut down forests for development

  8. The bats need to hibernate in Indiana caves without waking up • People mining, exploring, and touring caves wake the bats • People knock down the sleeping bat colonies • People shoot them • White-nose syndrome started killing the bats in 2006 • Scientists believe this is a fungus on the walls of cave that may be • spread by people • In 2008, abandoned mines and caves closed to people to help • stop spread of the disease. • Bars have been placed on caves to keep people out. • Laws have passed to help the Indiana Bat have place to live, food to eat

  9. REFERENCES Research Information Books The Bat Scientists, Mary Kay Carson, 2010, 22, 23, 41-48, 50-51,68 A Guide to Caves and Karst of Indiana, Samuel S. Frushour, 2012, Websites www.in.gov -DNR: Indiana Bats -State of Indiana www.fs.fed.us/r9/wildlife/tes/indianabat.htm www.fws.gov/midwest/endangered/mammals/inba Pictures www.angelfire.com www.arkive.org - Indiana bat videos, photos and facts www. beyondpesticides.org www.fs.fed.us www.fs.usda.gov www.indianadnr.wordpress.com www.nj.gov BATS! www.whyfiles.org

More Related