Quotes from individuals regarding the disposal of bats by AZA accredited zoos:
1)
"When I told the director that baby vampire bats were being washed down
the drain when the exhibit was hosed out, he said "consider it a means
of population control.'"''
2) "I talked with Ryan, the
pet store owner I know, and he found out the Egyptians are from the
Memphis Zoo. He has a friend in Austin that bought several. They are all
males."
3) "These are Leaf-nose Fruit Bats from S. America. I have already got the
lecture about what zoos are doing with surplus bats. I am not a zoo, and
do not agree with most of the things they do. ... I am
hoping to get some information on this before more babies fail to
survive. The ones I have dealt with so far have a good to great
appetite, but don't survive 24 hours."
4) "It is
outrageous the way smaller bats are mis-managed, and a welfare issue.
The surpluses available are ridiculous eg 200.200 from Central Park Zoo!
.....most zoos are simply not able (or
willing) to separate the sexes, and even when they do they often sex the
animals incorrectly and one male gets a field day!"
5) "I
just received a call from the Cincinnati Museum regarding a man in
Cincinnati who owns a pet store. Apparently he is gearing up to accept
"leaf-nose fruit bats" from a zoo in NC. This zoo is doling them out
much like the other zoo ... in FL."
6) "Apparently it has become
routine for zoos to indiscriminately supply the pet trade with their
surplus fruit bats. This practice seems highly irresponsible and cruel.
What can be done to stop this? Why is population control never
considered?"
7) "A friend of mine has recently been given about
200 Leaf-nose Fruit Bats that were left over from a zoo that closed.
Many of them have babies or have given birth since he acquired them.
Many others appear to be pregnant. Some of the babies have been dropping
off and he has not been successful in keeping the alive. He gave two to
me..."
8) "I am extremely concerned that bats will end up in the
pet trade. ... I do not know if this is still happening and if you hear
of any please let me know.The Memphis information is disturbing and I
will follow up with them. At the very least they should be neutering
bats before they send them out..."
9) "I have a group
of about 80 Jamaican fruits bats that we have used in testing flight
skills. ...the Denver Zoo wanted to give me all 400 they have on site if
they could have as their situation is out of control."
Direct quotes made by zookeepers from accredited zoos regarding bats in their care:
1) "I work with a colony of Seba's short-tailed bats (Carollia perspicillata) in captivity and lately we have been noticing a dramatic increase in the number of juvenile deaths. We have been unable to determine the reason why and it is driving us crazy! Necropsies have not been helpful the bats are so small that by the time we manage to get them to the necropsy room they are usually autolyzed. "
2) " ... we experienced overcrowding with our Rousettus colony in the past before we made them a single-sex colony and cut down on the number of specimens significantly their reactions were rejecting their babies and engaging in feeding frenzy behavior where they would devour absolutely everything offered to them in record time."
3) "The injured bats crawl around on the floor sometimes, and are able to fly for very short stints (maybe a couple of seconds, tops); they always return to their little cave, and so really are almost never seen by the public anyway."
4) "When we had more Jamaicans, we used to get questions from the public about them, because they would crawl on the floor sometimes, but since we now have only 9 left, among all the other bats in the flight, they are hardly even noticed."
5) "I find it really funny that you have someone looking for Egyptian fruit bats now, because a year ago when we were trying to change over to a single-sex colony, we had so much trouble finding places for them - no one wanted Egyptian fruit bats!"
6) "...about 10 Jamaican fruit bats (all-male and all ancient, the colony has been there since our building opened in 1995, but we are now trying to phase them out),..."