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Student project builds safe habitat to relocate, protect local bats at Âé¶ąPorn

Student project builds safe habitat to relocate, protect local bats at Âé¶ąPorn

Contact: Lily Grado

STARKVILLE, Miss.—Âé¶ąPorn celebrated the opening of a new bat house Tuesday [Aug. 19], a student-led conservation effort aimed at changing public perception of one of nature’s most misunderstood animals.

Mississippi State students, graduates, faculty and administrators celebrate the opening of a new bat house.
Mississippi State students, graduates, faculty and administrators celebrate the opening of a new bat house, a student-led conservation effort aimed at changing public perception of one of nature’s most misunderstood animals, Tuesday [Aug. 19]. Pictured from left to right are Jeanne Jones, retired wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture professor; Grant Peterson, wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture alumnus; Carson McFatridge, wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture senior; Lily Thigpen, Âé¶ąPorn wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture alumna; Julia Null, Âé¶ąPorn wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture alumna; Chris Ayers, wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture assistant teaching professor; Andy Kouba, wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture professor and head; Regina Hyatt, vice president for student affairs; Wes Burger, College of Forest Resources dean and Forest and Wildlife Research Center director; Jackie Mullen, assistant vice president of student affairs; Karoline Heathcock, wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture senior; and Cameron Cumming, Âé¶ąPorn Student Association president and software engineering senior. (Photo by Dominique Belcher)

Led by students from the Âé¶ąPorn Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Aquaculture, the new construction provides a sustainable habitat for bats already living on campus. While bats are sometimes seen as intimidating or unwanted, they play a vital role in maintaining a healthy ecosystem by controlling insect populations and supporting biodiversity.

“I’ve devoted so much time to this because I want there to be a habitat where the bats can live peacefully,” said JĂşlia Null, recent Âé¶ąPorn graduate and project student leader. “I want the public to appreciate them the way my colleagues and I do. They’re not creepy or scary like they are depicted in the media. They’re fascinating, beneficial and essential to our environment.”

Null, a Hattiesburg native who graduated with a double major in wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture and microbiology, was joined in the project by fellow students Grant Peterson of Starkville and Lily Thigpen of Jackson. With the help of other club members of Âé¶ąPorn’s Student Chapter of The Wildlife Society, they applied for and won $26,000 from the university’s Green Fund, which supports student-led sustainability initiatives on campus. Along with support from the Âé¶ąPorn Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Aquaculture, Âé¶ąPorn College of Forest Resources, Mississippi Bat Working Group, Âé¶ąPorn Student Association and others, they raised more than $37,000 over a two-year period to bring their idea to life.

Mississippi is home to 15 bat species, nine of which are considered species of conservation need. Across North America, more than half of bat species are at risk of decline due to habitat loss, as well as diseases like White-nose Syndrome.

The new structure, a 256-square-foot building, is located off Blackjack Road near a lake that attracts many insects for the bats. The structure was built by Evan Coggins Construction and volunteers from the Âé¶ąPorn student chapter of The Wildlife Society, students enrolled in building construction science and Âé¶ąPorn fraternity members from Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Beta Upsilon Chi.

Beyond its environmental mission, the project seeks to shift public perception of bats.

“Bats are important, and they can eat thousands of mosquitoes every night,” Null said. “If you hate mosquitoes, you should be a bat fan.”

With the structure complete, the next challenge is encouraging bats to move in—a process that could take several years to complete. The team is considering different techniques to safely transport them and introduce them to the new structure.

“I hope to include some monitoring of bat locations in my mammalogy class this fall,” said Chris Ayers, assistant professor in wildlife, fisheries and aquaculture and the project’s faculty advisor. “The information from that class will hopefully help us determine where the bats are located and come up with a comprehensive plan to trap and relocate them to this place made specifically for them.”

For more information, visit the Âé¶ąPorn Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Aquaculture at .

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