Here's a great Halloween project: Help House Your Local Bats!

As Halloween approaches, images of scary, blood-sucking bats become commonplace. Since the goal of the Kootenay Community Bat Project (KCBP) is to promote bat conservation, this is the perfect time of year to counter these bat myths and do something to help bats.
“The conservation of bats in BC has always been important since over half the species in this province are considered at risk,” Juliet Craig, the KCBP’s coordinating biologist, said in a statement on Wednesday, October 14. “However, since the introduction of White Nose Syndrome, a disease that is devastating bat populations where it has spread, bat conservation is more important than ever.”
White Nose Syndrome (WNS) is a disease caused by an introduced fungus that was first detected in a cave in New York in 2006. Since it was discovered, it has spread to 26 states and 5 provinces in North America, decimating bat populations along the way. An estimated six million bats have died from this disease so far and the number continues to climb.
“Luckily White Nose Syndrome is not yet in BC,” she said. “But we are preparing for its arrival by raising awareness about bats, working with landowners who have bats in buildings, enhancing bat habitat, and monitoring populations.”
Building bat-houses is one way to encourage healthy bat populations. With the decline of large trees and undisturbed rock features, some bat species have adapted to using human-made structures, such as bat-houses. These small boxes have several crevices inside that provide a safe, dry habitat where bats can roost during summer months.
“Bat-houses are particularly important for maternity colonies where groups of female bats roost together to have their pup during the summer,” Craig said. “A well-designed bat-house installed in a good location can provide a home for hundreds of bats.”
Funded by the Columbia Basin Trust, Columbia Valley Local Conservation Fund, Habitat Stewardship Program, and the Public Conservation Assistance Fund, the KCBP provides educational programs on bats, conducts site visits to landowners with bats in buildings, and offers a program called “Building Homes for Bats” where they reimburse the cost of materials to residents who build and install two bat-houses on their property.
To find out more about the Building Homes for Bats Reimbursement Program or to download plans for a bat-house, visit www.kootenaybats.com.
Here is a selection of photos of bat houses and their builders:

Saxon Bowick builds a bat-house for his family’s property. Photo courtesy of Erica Konrad
Saxon Bowick builds a bat-house for his family’s property. Photo courtesy of Erica Konrad

Young Indigo Bowick builds a bat-house. Photo courtesy of Erica Konrad
Young Indigo Bowick builds a bat-house. Photo courtesy of Erica Konrad

University students from the Redfish School of Change pose with the bat-houses they built. Photo courtesy of Juliet Craig
University students from the Redfish School of Change pose with the bat-houses they built. Photo courtesy of Juliet Craig

Marlene Hebert, builds and installs bat-houses as part of the Building Homes for Bats program. photo courtesy of Juliet Craig
Marlene Hebert, builds and installs bat-houses as part of the Building Homes for Bats program. photo courtesy of Juliet Craig

Bats in bat-house. Photo courtesy of Bob Young
Bats in bat-house. Photo courtesy of Bob Young

For more details on bat house construction please contact the Kootenay Community Bat Project by e-mail at kootenaybats@gmail.com or by phone at 1-855-9BC-BATS. You can also click on this image to visit the project's website at www.kootenaybats.com.
For more details on bat house construction please contact the Kootenay Community Bat Project by e-mail at kootenaybats@gmail.com or by phone at 1-855-9BC-BATS. You can also click on this image to visit the project’s website at www.kootenaybats.com.

Please click here to read an in-depth story about White Nose Syndrome.
Please click here to read a story about Parks Canada has wired the Nakimu Caves for the sound of bats.