Re: Using bat lure to attract bats to a bat house
[Re: Mike Flick]
#4530472
06/22/14 09:49 PM
06/22/14 09:49 PM
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Joined: Jul 2008
mequon, wisconsin
Paul Winkelmann
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jul 2008
mequon, wisconsin
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Location, Location, Location:
I've seen a number a bat houses installed in different directions, on barns, on trees, and elsewhere. The most intelligent place I've ever seen a bat house installed was over the main entrance to an attic on a farm house, that had housed bats for years.
Now I know that this is not exactly rocket science, but if you were asked to exclude, but not kill, bats at a lake front rental property,( Like we have ) wouldn't it make sense to ask that if, for an additional fee, they would like a bat house?
Don't get me wrong; There are some customers that could put you in traction for months for asking a question like that. Knowing your customer is part of the reason you're in business in the first place.
I'm just saying that their are people that are aware of what is going on in the world and we need to be one those people.
P.S. My wife is one of those who will hospitalize you, just so you know!
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Re: Using bat lure to attract bats to a bat house
[Re: DaveK]
#4530657
06/22/14 11:27 PM
06/22/14 11:27 PM
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Joined: Jul 2010
Oxford, Michigan
Aaron Curtis
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jul 2010
Oxford, Michigan
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You put it over the hole they are exiting, and they still exit there...because they can.
Winner winner chicken dinner.
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Re: Using bat lure to attract bats to a bat house
[Re: Mike Flick]
#4530768
06/23/14 01:13 AM
06/23/14 01:13 AM
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Joined: Apr 2010
NM
HD_Wildlife
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2010
NM
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I'm assuming Mike was thinking of when they are out and try to return and can't get in? Though this is based on the device (tube, pvc, pro cone, net, screen, etc...) being placed in the proper way (angle, length, etc...) so that the bat who has always entered at X spot is now looking at X spot and the only way in is 12-24" away at the end of the mesh, or tube, etc...
Bats do not have diminished eyesight though we all know the old "blind as a bat" myth that every client believes to be true (harvard educated or otherwise). The fact that bats echolocate is an evolved response to the way they hunt and the prey they hunt.
Lots and lots of science that would go on far beyond the point of this post and so not worth discussing at present but suffice to say, our North American bats do see and use vision for certain types of navigation in lieu of echolocation (this is well published).
*****
Back to the bat house attractant, my main question Mike was simply related to the idea of how this works or at least how you are selling it to work. If as Wink described we place a bat box right over the old entry point on a colony we are certainly going to have good luck with getting bats in that artificial house and I know at least a few dozen folks who have done this multiple times throughout the last several decades just as hobbyist bat box folks.
However, if we have no colony on our house, but we put up two bat boxes and we put your product on one as described in the video, and we don't put anything on the other and they are side by side similar color, wood, dimensions, exposure to sunlight, height off the ground, will we get bats in the attractant box over the other one, and how many times can we replicate this or do we need to to know that it is the odor versus other factors?
I know it would be science just for science to many, but if you are selling a product I would think this would be a baseline to really up sell your product if you prove percentage wise with your product that bats prefer that or find it first.
Bats are so driven by thermal dynamics it is honestly an entire field of study where they are concerned as a species and of course goes into bat box strategies by hobbyists, biologists, wildlifers of all kinds.
I suppose since we are on trapperman a good analogy is to talk lure and bait, young trappers as I was 20+ years ago often buy everything under the sun as the guy says it will surely draw those critters from a mile or more off, but then we learn as we go that some species have a "cold nose" and are more visual, etc....
While I can buy that bats of X species upon arriving at a new cedar box might find their species scent a cue that it is "safe" or "ok" to setup shop in, ultimately there aren't any North American bats that hunt by scent, they are completely visual and echolocating, so I'd consider them a "cold" nosed species.
Now to be fair and square here, please know that if you can figure out that this works over a control enough to pass the test, I know lots of folks who'd want to talk to you and would be buying. Being massively into bat conservation as my wife and I are, I'd be all over that product if it worked for all the bat box using species in North America, or even a sample of them.
For now though, I had to ask the questions because I know too many folks have tried and are trying all kinds of guano rubs and concoctions to get bats to accept houses quicker once they find them or believing they will find them by smelling them from a distance.
I suppose it is as anything else, if you get enough people to say it works for them or they believe it did, you'll still have success in selling it. I like proof, just a hang up I have, bought my first belisles 10+ years ago after seeing the proof they were better than others we were using.
Should also state that I'm not trying to knock you for the idea, I know tons of educated folks who are out smearing guano on boxes because they hope it will help, so if you have folks that believe it helps and you've seen it help in your case, there is a market for this.
Would love to see you setup a small study though, even if just in your state with your local bat box species. Lots of push for bat box programs with WNS raging across the country, should be lots of ways to find suitable partners to setup with that would allow you to test your product and show proof of results.
Just a thought (or maybe a few),
Best,
Justin
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Re: Using bat lure to attract bats to a bat house
[Re: Mike Flick]
#4530901
06/23/14 07:53 AM
06/23/14 07:53 AM
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Joined: Jan 2013
OH
Eric Arnold
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2013
OH
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Mike,
If you send WCT several bottles, we will have some testing done with it. I'll PM you our shipping address it you need it.
Eric Arnold Publishing Editor W.C.T. Magazine Editor The Fur Taker Magazine
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Re: Using bat lure to attract bats to a bat house
[Re: Mike Flick]
#4531030
06/23/14 10:32 AM
06/23/14 10:32 AM
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Joined: Apr 2010
NM
HD_Wildlife
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2010
NM
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Mike,
I've worked with rehabbers and have rehabbed myself and even pallid bats which are larger than any house dwelling bats in the north you never see their nose move. How would you "see" they are using sense of smell versus vision? Bats make micro calls even when I'm hand that are nearly in audible without acoustic equipment, so I can't see how someone can see on a bat watch that they are smelling versus seeing and using spatial memory.
It would be like watching me head to a restaurant and saying I smelled it when in reality I saw it from 3 miles away.
Many building entry points still have air flow after or during exclusion, the bats I'm those cases can technically smell their own odor we would assume all up and down a gapped piece of soffit, yet they focus on the one point as it is habit.
We use other options (screen, net) quite often but have used tubes as well and I've watched bats with my naked eye and with flir for hours attempting re-entry. No way I could see or know that their nose is what is driving their movement while trying to detect entry.
Again for me it's a coyote versus a bobcat. I have a silver haired bat right now for rehab and this along with the others shows that when they lift their head or look around and their mouth ones and therefore nose is raised along with the head they are sending out acoustic signals.
I can see them and the others I've worked with literally from and inch away and their nose is fixed, no "sniffing" movement.
Not saying they can't smell, of course they can, but to the extent they need that for finding a hole they've used 1,000s of times....?
If eyesight was so poor and smell was key guys wouldn't sweat the tubes being a certain length or angle.
Good opportunity from WCT to put this to the test, if it passes a test it would really have some marketability.
Timing though as you mentioned is key, bat boxes erected before spring emergence and return from migration allows for best sample to be done.
Good comments and thoughts hope this results in testing, as stated without paired no smell versus smell No one could state it is true factually, it is just a belief, though belief is sold every day to the time of millions and billions of dollars in lots of our society.
Best,
Justin
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