EFA: Etsy For Animals Etsy For Animals: bats


Etsy for Animals (EFA) aka Artists Helping Animals,

is a team of independent artists, craftspeople,

vintage sellers and craft suppliers on Etsy.com

who are dedicated to providing charitable relief to animals

by donating a portion of the profits from their shops

to an animal charity of their choosing,

and/or to EFA's featured Charity of the Month.

Showing posts with label bats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bats. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Bat Report II: Fruit Bats & Flying Foxes

Bat Report II:

Fruit Bats & Flying Foxes

by Heather of thebluewindmill




Fruit bats (Family Pteropodidae) live in dense forests in Africa, Europe, Australia, and Asia. There are about 166 species that are fruit bats in a bat family of over 900 species. Fruit bats are sometimes referred to as flying foxes. They live in huge colonies, known as ‘camps’ and these nocturnal animals are most active at night & rest during the day while hanging upside down from their feet.


“Fruit bats mostly eat fruit juice and flower nectar. They chew the fruit, then spit out the seeds, peel, and pulp. Fruit bats, like other Megachiropteran bats, use the sense of smell to find their food, fruit and/or nectar [rather than echolocation]. Although they have large eyes and can see well, fruit bats do not use sight as their primary sense" enchantedlearning.com



Photo courtesy of S. Heinrichs

Flying Fox Conservation Fund



Flying Fox Conservation Fund is a non-profit organization founded by Scott Heinrichs. He started the Flying Fox Conservation Fund in 1996 and here is what inspired his decision: “While I was conducting a market survey on the island of Sulawesi. I came across a crate of live and dead flying foxes. In the crate was a rare species Gray's flying fox. On the island of Sulawesi this particular bat species is poorly documented. I decided to purchase the bat, to collect data, photograph and then release. When the vendor removed the bat, I could see a very young and very scared Black flying fox peering from behind an adult. Knowing the fate of that bat and so many more, I decided instead of being witness to their demise, I would be their voice.”

The fund is dedicated to the protection of “fruit bats and their habitat through conservation, education and research”. Their “goal is to save Old World fruit bat populations and their habitat with a non confrontational approach to reach solutions which benefits bats, peoples and ecosystems”; and they believe that “education is the greatest tool one can use to conserve fruit bat populations from decline. Teaching governments, forestry, wildlife personnel and the public the benefits of bats. Help them understand how fruit bats impact their daily lives.”


Photo courtesy of S. Heinrichs

Flying Fox Conservation Fund



Reasons to save Fruit Bats


"Fruit bats play a vital role in the ecology of the rain forests where they live. Old world fruit bats eat the fruit, nectar or flowers of more than 300 plant species and these plants rely on the bats for seed dispersal and pollination. Unlike birds, bats disperse seeds far away from the parent tree by eating them and depositing the seeds in their droppings. In fact, Seeds dropped by bats can account for up to 95 percent of forest regrowth on cleared land. Performing this essential role puts these bats among the most important seed-dispersing animals of both the Old and New World."


"Bats are particularly important on islands where they are often the only flying animals big enough to transport larger seeds. Fruit bats have been shown to be the sole pollinator of the Baobab tree in Africa, this tree is important to so many other wildlife it is called the "Tree of Life".


"Small fruit bats such as the Dawn bat are important pollinators of many important agricultural plants like durian, mangoes, cashew, figs, balsa, dates, kapok and others. Some plants, like the durian of south East Asia, produce white flowers that only open at night and drop off the tree by morning, these flowers are especially designed to be pollinated by fruit bats."


“So, any decline to fruit bat populations will have a wider reaching consequence than just the loss of a species. If the fruit bats disappear, the rainforest where they live will not survive, [and] as a result many of the animals which depend on the rainforest will disappear as well. Economies of tropical countries highly rely on over 134 fruits and other products which are bat pollinated, without fruit bats their economies will suffer as a result."


“Last but not least, the major reason for protecting fruit bats is that they are beautiful, gentle, intelligent living creatures that deserve to live.”


Photo courtesy of S. Heinrichs

Flying Fox Conservation Fund


Flying Fox Conservation Fund is working towards opening a fruit bat rescue, rehabilitation, captive breeding, and research center on the island of Sulawesi. This center will be the first of its kind in all of Indonesia. The facility will help the Sulawesi wildlife personnel place fruit bats rescued from markets for later release, the center will be used to educate local people about the beneficial role bats play in their everyday lives. Flying Fox Conservation Fund will start a captive breeding program for threatened and endangered fruit bats. The center will be used by researchers and students to study fruit bats in captivity. Also if there is a need, our facility will be a sanctuary for Sulawesi's other endangered wildlife.”


On Oct. 21, 2010, Scott Heindrichs reported that the Flying Fox Conservation Fund recently “returned from Sulawesi, where [they] collect[ed] some Sulawesi flying foxes for a captive breeding program and presented an award to a village that has been protecting a camp of over 10,000 flying foxes for over 15 years”.


For more information or to make a donation to support this charity, visit

http://www.flyingfoxconservationfund.com/home.html


Photo courtesy of S. Heinrichs

Flying Fox Conservation Fund



For information on bat preservation, you can also check out Tolga Bat Hospital in Australia: Tolga Bat Hospital receives approximately "300 pups each tick season, many of them orphans. We foster out as many orphans as possible but are usually left with over 100 pups at the hospital itself"; and they "house 4 species of Australian flying foxes, tube-nosed bats, and microbats".




"I spotted this beautiful bat in the evening, when the sun was rolling toward the horizon, silhouetting the trees against the perfect sky. The colony of wild Australian flying-foxes (which are basically large bats) to which this one belonged to, were just waking up and stretching their wings. His buddies flew off a moment earlier, and this one was left alone for a few minutes to swing upside-down in the wind, and probably ponder the forest landscape beneath him - or so I like to think! " OcelotEyes

Sunday, November 07, 2010

EFA TREASURY: what do bats eat ?

"A single little brown bat can eat up to 1000 mosquitoes in a single hour, and is one of the world's longest-lived mammals for its size, with life spans of almost 40 years." Defenders of Wildlife

70% of bats eat insects such as mosquitos, scorpions, centipedes... others eat nectar, pollen, fruit and then some eat frogs, fish, rodents, birds and... other bats.


WHAT DO BATS EAT ?
Click HERE to visit Treasury !

featuring EFA members:

thefrogbag, SharonFosterArt,
thefaeriecupboard, thebluewindmill,
layla, oceloteyes, emandsprout,
TheRusticHome, brizel4TheAnimals,
youwannatalkjive plus guests

Like so many species today...
bats are struggling to survive...
their biggest threat is people,
wind turbines and white-nose syndrome.
(4 more info read Heather's article)


Help a bat today
by giving one a home
or by adopting one through
Defenders of Wildlife:

I'm a Defender of Wildlife - Are You? - Defenders.org

Thursday, November 04, 2010

BAT report I: White-Nose Syndrome

BAT report I:

White-Nose Syndrome

by Heather of thebluewindmill


Big-eared Townsend Bat © thebluewindmill


"It's a horror story -- but it's all too real. White-nose syndrome has devastated bat populations along the East Coast -- and this lethal infection is spreading. Biologists estimate that more than 1 million bats have fallen victim to this deadly fungal disease” Defenders of Wildlife


Madeline Bodin, a writer from Vermont who specializes in natural sciences, reports the spread of the disease in her article for Defenders Magazine, Fall 2010, titled Flying in the Dark. She reports that regional director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s northeast region, Marvin Moriarty, has seen the disease first hand. The most prominent symptom is the fuzzy white mustache that the infected victims wear. In 2006, it started with New York, Vermont, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, then encompassed New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia. In the spring of 2010, the disease spread to “Maryland, Tennessee, Missouri, Oklahoma and the Canadian provinces of Quebec and Ontario”.


Indiana Bat © USFWS


More than a million bats in the eastern United States are estimated to have died since white-nose syndrome was first detected in 2006”. The white fungus is the most obvious symptom but it is not the cause.


Microbiologist, David Blehert, at the U.S. Geological Survey’s National Wildlife Health Center in Madison, Wisconsin, noticed a pattern in 10 out of a 100 bats that were analyzed, and found “the same unusual, unknown fungus growing in their skin. Further tests showed that the fungus was found everywhere white-nose syndrome was found, but not where the syndrome wasn’t present.”


"It’s very unusual for a fungal infection to make a warm-blooded animal sick" Blehert says. Fungi that live on the skin of warm-blooded animals are called dermatophytes. A typical dermatophyte is athlete’s foot. Generally these fungi stay in the top-most layer of skin, and while itchy, rarely kill their hosts.


Little Brown Bat with White-nose © USFWS


This fungus Blehert discovered, however, is different. It grows right through the dead skin cells of the epidermis into the living cells of the dermis below. Further, this fungus loves the cold. It grows best in temperatures between about 41 to 50 degrees F and doesn’t grow at all at temperatures above 70 degrees. This fungus would never grow on human skin. It’s too warm. But, Blehert notes, during hibernation: "bats’ body temperatures drop to within a degree or two of the temperature of the cave they are hibernating in, a temperature range that brings them within the fungi’s growth range.”


When Marvin Moriarty investigated Greeley Mine in Stockbridge, Vermont he found that the bats did not have the white fuzzy fungus above their noses; instead he found bats that were “nailed to the side of the cave with the mycelium of the fungus attaching them to the cave wall. It was on their abdomens, on their wings, it was everywhere.”


What Jonathan Wood, secretary of the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources remembers most is the pile of tiny, toothpick-like bat bones that littered the cave floor. Trained as a forester, Wood knew bones like that don’t last long in the wild. This was a fresh tragedy. As much as he knew about white-nose syndrome before visiting the mine: "It doesn’t sink home until you see the results right there in front of you" Wood said".


Indiana Bat © USFWS


"Every bat eats up to half its body weight in insects each night. The loss of a million bats means that billions of flying insects—mostly moths and beetles, but also mosquitoes—have gone uneaten. Some of those moths and beetles are crop pests, meaning that farmers will have to use more pesticides or grow less food. As the syndrome spreads south, entire bat species are at risk of extinction.”


"White-nose syndrome is causing one of the most precipitous wildlife declines in North America in the last century" says Nina Fascione, former vice-president for field conservation programs at Defenders of Wildlife. "I can’t overstate how huge it is. There will be significant environmental and economic consequences."


To read this article in full and to discover what scientists are doing to slow the spread of the disease, check it out on the Defenders of Wildlife website HERE.


You can also watch a 3 minute Defenders of Wildlife video called "Behind the Scenes: Bats" with Madeline Bodin HERE.

Want to Adopt a Bat ?
you can do that through Defenders of Wildlife

"How Your Adoption Helps Save Bats

Helps us educate Congress about white nose syndrome, an alarming disease killing large numbers of bats, and request action to address it.

Enables us to educate the public and policy makers about the vital role that bats and other wildlife play in maintaining healthy ecosystems.

Helps us provide vital resources to support sensible energy development strategies and protect the public and private lands where bats live from destructive and disruptive development."


Click HERE to visit DOW's Wildlife Adoption Center

I'm a Defender of Wildlife - Are You? - Defenders.org

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