Current:Home > Markets1,600 bats fell to the ground during Houston's cold snap. Here's how they were saved -SovereignWealth
1,600 bats fell to the ground during Houston's cold snap. Here's how they were saved
View
Date:2025-04-25 08:48:04
Some 1,600 bats found a temporary home this week in the attic of a Houston Humane Society director, but it wasn't because they made it their roost.
It was a temporary recovery space for the flying mammals after they lost their grip and plunged to the pavement after going into hypothermic shock during the city's recent cold snap.
On Wednesday, over 1,500 will be released back to their habitats — two Houston-area bridges — after wildlife rescuers scooped them up and saved them by administering fluids and keeping them warm in incubators.
Mary Warwick, the wildlife director at the Houston Humane Society, said she was out doing holiday shopping when the freezing winds reminded her that she hadn't heard how the bats were doing in the unusually cold temperatures for the region. So she drove to the bridge where over 100 bats looked to be dead as they lay frozen on the ground.
But during her 40-minute drive home, Warwick said they began to come back to life, chirping and moving around in a box where she collected them and placed them on her heated passenger seat for warmth. She put the bats in incubators and returned to the bridge twice a day to collect more.
Two days later, she got a call about more than 900 bats rescued from a bridge in nearby Pearland, Texas. On the third and fourth day, more people showed up to rescue bats from the Waugh Bridge in Houston, and a coordinated transportation effort was set up to get the bats to Warwick.
Warwick said each of the bats were warmed in an incubator until their body temperature rose and then hydrated through fluids administered to them under their skin.
After reaching out to other bat rehabilitators, Warwick said it was too many for any one person to feed and care for and the society's current facilities did not have the necessary space, so they put them in her attic where they were separated by colony in dog kennels and able to reach a state of hibernation that did not require them to eat.
"As soon as I wake up in the morning I wonder: 'How are they doing, I need to go see them,' " Warwick said.
Now, nearly 700 bats are scheduled to be set back in the wild Wednesday at the Waugh Bridge and about 850 at the bridge in Pearland as temperatures in the region are warming. She said over 100 bats died due to the cold, some because the fall itself — ranging 15-30 feet — from the bridges killed them; 56 are recovering at the Bat World sanctuary; and 20 will stay with Warwick a bit longer.
The humane society is now working to raise money for facility upgrades that would include a bat room, Warwick added. Next month, Warwick — the only person who rehabilitates bats in Houston — said the society's entire animal rehabilitation team will be vaccinated against rabies and trained in bat rehabilitation as they prepare to move into a larger facility with a dedicated bat room.
"That would really help in these situations where we continue to see these strange weather patterns come through," she said. "We could really use more space to rehabilitate the bats."
Houston reached unusually frigid temperatures last week as an Arctic blast pushed across much of the country. Blizzard conditions from that same storm system are blamed for more than 30 deaths in the Buffalo, New York-area.
veryGood! (36852)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Bobby Ussery, Hall of Fame jockey whose horse was DQ’d in 1968 Kentucky Derby, dies at 88
- Peso Pluma, Nicki Nicole go red carpet official at Latin Grammys 2023: See the lovebirds
- Prosecutors prep evidence for Alec Baldwin 'Rust' shooting grand jury: What you need to know
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Karol G wins album of the year at 2023 Latin Grammys: See the winners list
- California Interstate 10 reopens Tuesday, several weeks ahead of schedule
- 4 surgeries, 9 rounds of chemo: This college athlete is back to basketball and crushing it
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- New report outlines risks of AI-enabled smart toys on your child's wish list
Ranking
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Former NBA stars convicted of defrauding the league's health insurance of millions
- Why is there lead in some applesauce? FDA now screening cinnamon imports, as authorities brace for reports to climb
- Ravens TE Mark Andrews suffered likely season-ending ankle injury, John Harbaugh says
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Prices fall, unemployment rises and Boomers have all the houses
- US sanctions Iran-backed militia members in Iraq conducting strikes against American forces
- French commission wants to remove statute of limitations for sexual violence against children
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Open AI founder Sam Altman is suddenly out as CEO of the ChatGPT maker
Israeli troops kill 5 Palestinians, including 3 militants, as West Bank violence surges
Advertiser exodus grows as Elon Musk's X struggles to calm concerns over antisemitism
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
Untangling Emma Stone and Nathan Fielder's Parody of Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell
More than 240 Rohingya refugees afloat off Indonesia after they are twice refused by residents
Ravens can breathe easy with Lamar Jackson – for now – after QB gives stiff-arm to injury scare