Fierce Little Brown Bat Hisses His Way to Health With Help From Local Wildlife Center
The following story is from Bird Ally X, our local wildlife care center.
Monte Merrick, its director, tells us that this story they posted on their website is getting a lot of readers…from Texas. We thought you wouldn’t want to miss out on what our local, little non-profit is doing especially if folks as far away as Texas are interested.
Last Monday morning as staff rolled into the clinic to open for the day, a white pickup truck from the Humboldt Waste Management Authority was parked in our lot. Sure enough a few minutes later, an employee from the Eureka facility came though our door. She had a bat in a small cardboard box.
She said that someone had dropped off a bucket of used motor-oil soaked rags along with other hazardous waste from somewhere up in the hills east of the Bay. In that bucket there was also a Big Brown Bat (Eptesicus fuscus).
At first glance, the bat did not look good. He was completely covered in motor oil. We could barely detect his small, shallow breaths. We immediately placed him in our incubator, small box and all.
Our incubator is kept ready 24/7 for exactly this reason. This patient needed heat and he needed it now, not when the thing was warmed up in a minute or five.
Soon he’d regained his composure, crawled from the box and was investigating the incubator. He was also trying to lick the oil from his fur.
After he was sufficiently warmed and alert enough to be handled with less risk to his health, we prepared a quick bath for him to remove as much of the viscous motor oil as we could, before he licked more of it. Oil is bad for fur, bad for skin, and poison to eat.
During his post-bath examination he briefly escaped from our grasp and flew around the small examination room! This bat was ready to get it done.
He still had a bit of oil in his head, so a quick second bath was necessary. (Photo at top of page is from his second bath.)
After two days of rest, mealworms, and regularly being misted to check his fur for cleanliness and…that he be…able to handle the actual world of rain and cold, we determined that he was ready for release.
While in care we tested the bat for parasites. He was negative – a perfectly healthy bat in a very bad situation!
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We released him with ample time before sundown and provided a ready-made hiding place so that he was safe until he had his bearings. (See photo above.)
We only had a rough approximation of where he was from initially. We took him back to the area where the bucket had come from, hoping we were relatively close.This is not ideal, but without a more precise location, it was the best we could do.
What we do know is that he came very close to meeting his fate in the bottom of one of the most stupid and ordinary things in the world – a barrel of society’s petroleum waste.
Thanks to you that bat had a place to go. Imagine the initial surprise the people at Humboldt Waste Management Authority felt when first discovering the bat in the bucket of oily rags. If not for you, they would have had no recourse. Everyday, your support makes that difference. Thank you!
All photos: Bird Ally X
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Such an incredibly amazing group!!!!!
I want some of the pot tax to go to them.
And kudos to the worker who brought him in. I love watching the bats eat all those insects at dusk 🙂
They are a great group of folks. I helped them with a release of pelicans one day. The birds were transported in their own cages & released separately. One pelican took a few steps, flew a couple of loops around the rescuers, then took off for the island where a bunch of pelicans were hanging out. It was a lovely thank you (to anthropomorphize it). P.s. one male pelican must have stood at almost 4′.
I am going to tell my son about this so he can check it out and see if my Grand Daughter can help in some way.
Thank you Kym for this positive story. Your one in a million. Bless you.
Bats are good, great effort to all parties involved!
This is too cool! Hats off to these folks.
Awwwwww, I love bats. So cool that it made it!