Halloween PSA: More Bat Species Appearing On Endangered List, And Here’s Why It Matters

Bats are our friends, and it would be ghoulish to think otherwise.
Minor epauletted bat from Kenya.
Minor epauletted bat from Kenya.
Merlin Tuttle

Bats have given Merlin Tuttle a great life, taking him all over the world, in pursuit of studying and advocating for the endlessly fascinating -- and extremely adorable -- creatures.

For five decades, Tuttle has been examining, photographing and going around telling everyone why we should care about and protect bats. For example, do you like fruit and flowers? Thank bats for being such great pollinators. Hate insects? Thank you bats, again, for eating them by the ton!

"These are incredible animals," Tuttle tells The Huffington Post. "I keep making new discoveries."

A brown long-tongued bat is pollinating a Tricanthera flower in Panama.
A brown long-tongued bat is pollinating a Tricanthera flower in Panama.
Merlin Tuttle

Tuttle's just-released memoir, The Secret Lives of Bats: My Adventures with the World's Most Misunderstood Mammals, gets into both the bats and the man who has spent his life learning everything he can about them.

A northern ghost bat roosting in an American oil palm in Costa Rica. This is a rarely seen species.
A northern ghost bat roosting in an American oil palm in Costa Rica. This is a rarely seen species.
Merlin Tuttle

It's a terrific read that will give you a much deeper appreciation of the 1,300-odd types of bats we now know exist, and all the work -- and joy -- that goes into understanding and protecting them.

"Bats can form longterm friendships. They share information. They adopt orphans. They help others in need. They do all kinds of neat things that people wouldn't even dream of finding in a little animal like a bat," Tuttle said. "Wherever you look, you can find some kind of bat that's doing something new and amazing."

Ethiopian epauletted fruit bat carrying a fig in Kenya. Small fruit bats are the most efficient dispersers of wild figs worldwide.
Ethiopian epauletted fruit bat carrying a fig in Kenya. Small fruit bats are the most efficient dispersers of wild figs worldwide.
Merlin Tuttle

The book conveys much of this amazement. It's also advancing arguments against scare-mongering, with regard to bats spreading diseases like rabies and Ebola.

They're necessary, given that an estimated quarter of the world's bats are considered to be in serious trouble -- close to home, too, where North American bats are dying by the million from a fungus called White Nose Syndrome.

Indeed, Tuttle hopes that his work -- his long decades of conservation advocacy, his new book and his thousands and thousands of gorgeous photographs -- is helping bring the public perception of bats, and in turn conservation efforts, "a step in the right direction."

Merlin Tuttle

Tuttle also cites improvements. Like Thai farmers getting excited about how bats are essential to the growing of their beloved durian fruit. And Austin city officials enthusing about an estimated 100,000 visitors per year coming to witness the world's largest urban bat colony.

The hope is that even more successes are coming down the line, as folks become more aware of how great bats are.

"I’ve been privileged to discover bats as safe neighbors with winsome personalities and incredible intelligence, who contribute dramatically to human well-being," Tuttle said. "And by sharing my adventures into their secret world, I hope one day to see these villains of the past become heroes of the future."

Pallid bat carrying a long-horned grasshopper in Texas.
Pallid bat carrying a long-horned grasshopper in Texas.
Merlin Tuttle

To address one last point: reading this terrific book, seeing the wonderful photographs, may lead you to become so bat-loving that you think perhaps it'd be fun to keep one of these smart, adorable creatures as a pet?

Well, just cut that out right now.

No matter how charmed you might be by Tuttle's photos and stories, do not try to keep a pet bat for yourself. Not because bats are dangerous, but because you are.

"They have all kinds of unique needs. Imagine trying to keep an animal fed that can catch 1,000 mosquito-sized insects in an hour," said Tuttle "Bats are very sophisticated animals that really require so much more attention than most of us would know how to provide."

Minor epauletted bats mating in Kenya.
Minor epauletted bats mating in Kenya.
Merlin Tuttle

Follow Merlin Tuttle's work on Facebook and on his website, where he's made dozens of his gorgeous photographs available for free download. Buy The Secret Lives of Bats on Amazon.

And get in touch at arin.greenwood@huffingtonpost.com if you know a deeply misunderstood critter, or have another animal story to share!

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