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Selecting a Quality Bat House

By Merlin Tuttle
2/15/19

A bat house fully occupied by little brown myotis (Myotis lucifugus) in western New York. This is one of seven that Lew and Dorothy Barnes mounted on their barn. Combined, they held more than 1,600 bats prior to the arrival of WNS. Since 2013 50-70 have remained.

Ever since I first introduced the idea of attracting bats to American yards in 1982, one of the most frequently asked questions has been, “Where can I purchase a good bat house?” The next, of course, is “How do I know bats will come?”

Over decades of time we’ve learned a great deal about bat preferences, and in fact today, quality Bat Houses, properly located, are achieving close to 90 percent success. But the biggest problem has been finding reliable vendors who’s bat houses truly meet bat needs. Far too many purchasers have become discouraged due to failure of cheap, poorly constructed houses, or even good houses sold with inadequate instructions.

Characteristics of a Quality Bat House

  • Most temperate-zone bats prefer roosting crevices 0.75” wide. Wherever you live, several species likely will prefer this spacing. A few may prefer up to 1.5” crevices. These mostly include just three species. The endangered Florida bonneted bat (Eumops floridanus) lives only in central and southern Florida. Big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) are frequent bat house users throughout most of North America and are often found in 1 to 1.5” wide crevices. Pallid bats (Antrozous pallidus) occur in arid and semi-arid areas of the West, from southern Canada through much of Mexico. Multi-chamber houses that include one or two of the wider roosting crevices may appeal to the most species.
  • Taller houses provide the best thermal options. This is especially important in single-chamber houses (best at least 20” tall).
  • Tight fit construction, with all seams caulked, reduces leakage and warping that leads to abandonment.
  • Best resistance to weathering and warping is provided by houses with a UV-resistant plastic outer shell. However, wooden houses can be highly successful and long lasting if treated with a water-based sealant or three coats of paint. Houses that remain unsealed or unpainted often become warped and uninhabitable within 2-3 years. A water-based sealant is best for landing areas. Paint can render surfaces too smooth for secure footing.
  • All exterior parts of wooden houses ideally should be at least 0.5” thick. Any plywood used should be exterior grade.
  • All interior surfaces and landing areas must be roughened enabling bats, especially young, to gain secure footing. One-sixteenth-inch deep horizontal grooves at 0.5” intervals are ideal. Hand-roughened (scratched) surfaces or high quality, tightly-fitted screen also work well.
  • All bat houses should have a roughened landing area extending at least 4” below the entrance, with one exception. Multi-chamber houses permit an ideal option. By extending the roughened surface of the back to extend approximately 4” below the roosting partitions and permitting the sides, back and front to also extend approximately 4” below the roosting partitions, a recessed landing area can be provided. This ensures ideal protection against owl attack during entry.
Georgia pecan grower, Frank Biben, became organic after attracting thousands of Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) to his orchard. The tin roof protects from mid-day sun in a hot climate, while dark sides enable heating early and late in the day. Both large and small bat houses can be successful as long as the bats’ basic needs are met, i.e. appropriate crevice width and roughness, temperature, and security from predators.

Choosing a Size

As bat house quality and knowledge of preferred mounting locations, have improved, size has become less important. Many single-chambered houses are now successful when mounted on buildings. Houses with two or more chambers are most likely to attract nursery colonies. When a bat house is being provided as a new home for a colony about to be excluded from a building, it should be large enough to shelter the number of bats being excluded.

An early bat house study showed that people who provided two or more houses were twice as successful, possibly because most crevice-roosting bats are accustomed to living in snags or beneath loose bark, both of which tend to unpredictably fall, potentially leaving occupants homeless. Knowing there are options nearby appears to increase attractiveness.

Before purchasing a house designed to shelter thousands of bats, it is best to experiment with smaller two to four-chamber houses. If they succeed, larger houses are nearly always successful.

Where Bats are Most Easily Attracted

Mixed habitats near fresh water, such as lakes or rivers, are ideal. Areas where bats have attempted to live in buildings are also extra successful. Not all bats roost in crevices. However, crevice roosting species are typically the most abundant nearly everywhere, including at least 10 species that occupy bat houses in North America. Wherever you live there is a reasonable chance of attracting bats.

Where to Mount Bat Houses

This successful pair of bat houses, mounted on a pole in Texas, is shielded from mid-day sun by a metal roof, so it doesn’t over heat even though painted a dark color. Pole-mounted houses seldom work well in cold or highly variable climates. In such areas bat houses should be placed on buildings which can help stabilize temperature.

Outer walls of buildings are the best mounting sites for small houses and are the only locations likely to succeed in arid areas or cold climates. Buildings act as heat sinks, stabilizing temperature. In addition, bat houses in cold climates should be dark brown or black and positioned to maximize solar heating.

In more moderate and tropical climates, bat houses do very well on poles, ideally at least 12-15 feet above ground.

All bat houses should be in sunny areas, even in hot climates. There is a strong preference for dark brown or black houses in the coldest regions, with lighter-colored, well-vented houses, preferred where it is hot.

A North American study revealed that bat houses mounted on trees are least successful and take, on average, twice as long to attract bats even when successful. Bat houses on tree trunks are typically more shaded and may also be more vulnerable to predators.

Bats fear owls and climbing predators, probably at least one reason why it is best to keep bat houses at least 20 feet from the nearest trees. Nearby perches may help owls to sit and wait for bats to enter. Young ones are a bit slower and risk being pounced on. In warm climates, pole-mounted houses may require snake guards like those used to protect purple martins.

 

When to Expect Occupants

Where needs for homes are extreme, even poorly designed bat houses sometimes attract first occupants within just a few days. Two to six months is closer to average, and some very successful houses have taken years to gain first occupancy. Early occupancy is generally more common in locations where bats have already experienced bat houses. Some extraordinarily successful houses, especially extra-large ones, have taken 2-3 years or more to succeed. In all cases I am aware of, the largest houses take the longest to attract their first occupants, though those I’ve been involved with have eventually attracted thousands, in one instance hundreds of thousands.

Bat house owners in America are increasingly participating as citizen scientists in bat counts to document status trends since huge losses due to white-nose syndrome. This family’s bat houses once sheltered more than 1,400 little brown myotis (Myotis lucifugus). Now they’re documenting the species’ gradual recovery from just 50 in 2015 to 152 in 2018.

If you know you have a good bat house mounted in a good location, be patient. There is no evidence that adding bat guano will attract bats faster. Bats will likely arrive eventually. If an unoccupied house isn’t receiving at least seven hours of direct, daily sun, it may need to be moved prior to achieving success.

A roughened landing area, combined with recessed roosting crevices, permits bats to enter quickly with minimal exposure to predators such as owls. Bat house provided by Bat Conservation and Management, Inc.

MTBC-Approved Bat House Vendors

The following retailers meet most of my criteria for bat house success and longevity. There are likely others providing quality houses, and we would be happy to consider adding them to our list once they pass our inspection. To seek approval, please ship a sample of the design you would like approved (including instructions) to:

Merlin Tuttle’s Bat Conservation
5000 Mission Oaks Blvd., # 41
Austin, TX 78735
U.S.A.

Approval, acceptance, or rejection will be within seven working days. Submitted houses and their accompanying information will be donated at local fund-raising events.

(alphabetically)

BatBnB

Bat Conservation & Management

Habitat for Bats

We invite suggestions and feedback on your experiences.

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