Wyandotte History


Our Trip


Bats of Indiana


Wonders of Wyandotte


Expert Interviews


Cave Facts


Bat Facts


 Resources


About Us


Home


 

 

 

 

 

 

Bats of Indiana
Hoary Bat


A Hoary Bat flying near a cave
drawing by CES Media Club

Scientific Name: Lasiurus cinereus

Description: This bat is a light brown color and has some whitish tipped fur. It weighs around an ounce and is one of the largest bats in the United States. It has a yellow "collar" of fur under its chin. Its ears are short and round. It has a sixteen inch wingspan!

Population: The Hawaiian Hoary bat is endangered. There is no real data on the actual population trends of the Hoary bat, but they are considered relatively common throughout the northern range.

Food: This bat eats late in the evening. It is an insectivorous so it eats a lot of insects like moths, flies, grasshoppers, beetles and other insects. It uses echolocation to find its prey.

Range: The Hoary bat is found in all fifty states in the United States. It is also found in South America, Canada and even the Caribbean Islands. It lives in forested areas.

Reproduction: They usually have twins in late Spring or early Summer. They group together in mating season but are considered solitary and do not have colonies.They usually have two babies in May, June or early July.


 

The hoary bat usually lives alone or just with a small family group.
They like to live in forest areas and like to spend their days hanging
in the trees covered with foliage on top but open underneath.
They have been found to go back to the same tree to roost each
season, if the tree is undisturbed.


A Hoary bat
(c) Merlin D. Tuttle
Bat Conservation International

They migrate during fall and spring. They can even be seen
flying on warmer winter days. They are very fast at flying.
In fact, they are estimated to fly up to speeds of 60 miles per hour!

Dr. Clark McCreedy, a wildlife biologist, had this to say
about the Hoary bat...

"Even people who are not fascinated by bats agree that
the frost-colored fur of the hoary bat is down right attractive!"
 


Hoary Bat
(click on the photograph to see larger image)
(courtesy Dr. Clark McCreedy)





The Hoary bat hanging in a tree
(drawing by CES Media Club)


*****************

References/Resources

Drawings of Hoary Bat by
Cannelton Elementary Media Club

Top photograph of the Hoary bat is
(c) Merlin D. Tuttle
Bat Conservation International

Bottom photograph of the Hoary
bat is courtesy of
Dr. Clark McCreedy


All other photographs belong to
CES Media Club

BOOKS:

Bats of the United States by
Michael J. Harvey, J. Scott Altenbach,
and Troy L. Best, Arkansas Game
& Fish Commision and the U. S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, copyright 1999

Those Amazing Bats by Cheryl Mays Halton
Dillon Press, New York copyright 1991

WEBSITES:

Kentucky Bat Working Group
http://www.biology.eku.edu/bats.htm

ENature

http://enature.com/fieldguides/

Bat Conservation International
http://www.batcon.org


*****************

Comments? Questions? You can e-mail us at: jgoble@cannelton.k12.in.us