{"id":54635,"date":"2019-10-22T10:30:00","date_gmt":"2019-10-22T18:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/celebrate-bat-weekend-at-mendenhall-visitor-center\/"},"modified":"2019-10-22T15:08:22","modified_gmt":"2019-10-22T23:08:22","slug":"celebrate-bat-weekend-at-mendenhall-visitor-center","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/celebrate-bat-weekend-at-mendenhall-visitor-center\/","title":{"rendered":"Celebrate bat week(end) at Mendenhall visitor center"},"content":{"rendered":"
The U.S. Forest Service will shine a light on a misunderstood mammal this weekend.<\/p>\n
The agency is hosting Bat Week, an international celebration that raises awareness of the furry-winged creatures, with exhibits and talks in Juneau and Ketchikan. From 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Friday through Sunday, the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center will serve up educational programs on Alaska’s bats, including arts and crafts for children.<\/p>\n
“Bat Week is used to highlight the importance of bats and it’s done around Halloween because it seems like an apropos time to think about bats since people think of them as these spooky creatures and everything,” Ben Limle, a wildlife biologist for the USFS in Ketchikan, said in an interview on Tuesday.<\/p>\n
[Fish and Game wants citizen scientists to turn their cars into batmobiles<\/a>]<\/ins><\/p>\n Bat Conservation International organizes the event, and includes materials and resources for Bat Week at batweek.org<\/a>. There are most than 1,300 bat species around the world, according to BCI, and their predation of insects serve as a pest control that can benefit farmers.<\/p>\n Limle has a similarly-positive outlook on bats.<\/p>\n While with the USFS in Kentucky, the biologist got up-close-and-person with the mammals. As part of a public presentation he will give Thursday in Ketchikan, the biologist will debunk myths about the nocturnal creatures, such as their characterization as aggressive, blood-sucking creatures.<\/p>\n “I never thought bats could be cute at all, but a lot of these smaller bats in the Genus Myotis — which that genus means mouth-eared bats — are kind of cute looking,” said Limle, who added the three species of vampire bats live in Central and South America and don’t prey on humans. “That was one of the big surprising things to me. They’ve got these small eyes, (they) almost look like a puppy.”<\/p>\n