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Become a citizen scientist with the B.C. annual Bat Count

Volunteers counting bats as they emerge from an attic roost.

The B.C. Community Bat Program is calling for volunteers to get involved in the B.C. annual Bat Count. Starting June 1, bat biologists and volunteers will enjoy late nights counting bats at maternity roosts throughout the province.

“Female bats roost together in summer and raise their young in maternity colonies,” said Tina Watters, Omineca coordinator for the BC Community Bat Program. “They generally only have one pup per female in June.”

The males do not help with raising the young and usually roost by themselves in large trees, rock cliffs, boulder fields, or barns and buildings.

The Annual Bat Count involves sitting outside a bat maternity roost at sunset and, for an hour, counting all the bats that come out of that roost.

“The maternity roosts that we count are in buildings, bat boxes, or bridges,” said Watters.

Last year, volunteers conducted 888 bat counts at 274 different maternity roost sites across the province.

“The data collected is really important as it helps us know how the bat populations are doing in B.C.,” said Watters. “We usually do 4 bat counts at every roost site – two in June to count just the females and two more starting mid-July when the pups are learning to fly.”

Begun in 2012, the annual Bat Count is the only long-term monitoring program focused on bat summer roosts in B.C. The counts help biologists monitor bat populations and track impacts on or recovery of species. If populations decline, it could indicate impacts from white-nose syndrome (WNS), a fungal disease that has decimated bat populations in eastern Canada and the USA. The fungus that causes WNS was detected in 2022 in the Grand Forks region of B.C., but WNS itself has not been detected yet in B.C.

“A large number of the roost site we count, house Little Brown Myotis and Yuma Myotis, both of which are susceptible to white-nose syndrome,” said Watters.

Bats in B.C. are key predators of many night-flying insects. They are essential parts of B.C.’s ecosystems and provide billions of dollars of economic benefit by helping control agricultural, forest, and urban pests.

Please report a bat colony or sign up to help with bat counts at www.bcbats.ca, omineca@bcbats.ca, or 1-855-922-2287 ext. 26. In partnership with the BC Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship, the BC Community Bat Program provides information and promotes local stewardship and citizen science. The program runs thanks to funding from the Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation, the Forest Enhancement Society of BC, and the Habitat Stewardship Program. You can find out more about the BC Community Bat Program and options for helping local bat populations at www.bcbats.ca.

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