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Home » What You Didn’t Know About Bats: Merlin Tuttle (Transcript)

What You Didn’t Know About Bats: Merlin Tuttle (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of ecologist Merlin Tuttle’s talk titled “What You Didn’t Know About Bats” at TEDxUTAustin 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

MERLIN TUTTLE: Thank you. I’m delighted to have this opportunity to share some of what I’ve learned from defending traditionally misunderstood and intensely hated bats. As you’re about to see, they actually rank among our safest and most beneficial neighbors, and they come in a world of amazing surprises.

From the brilliantly colored painted bats of Southeast Asia to Snow White ghost bats of Latin America, even the spectacular spotted bats found right here in Texas, they can be just as cute as any panda, as strange as any dinosaur, or just plain funny. They range in size from giant flying foxes with nearly six foot wingspans, down to tiny bumblebee bats that weigh about the same as a US penny.

Early Interest in Bats

I first learned about bats while exploring a cave near my home in East Tennessee. At age 17, I identified the bats as gray bats, but these bats apparently hadn’t read the books. The books all said that they lived in one cave year round and didn’t migrate, but my bats only came in the spring and fall. That got me very curious.

I convinced my mom to drive me to the Smithsonian, where I could talk to bat experts. And they gave me bands and said, “Why don’t you try to see where they go?” In an amazing turn of good luck, I actually found my banded bats within a couple of months, 100 miles away in another cave. Not surprisingly, when I decided to get a PhD and entered graduate school nearly a decade later, I decided to come back and study the gray bat for my thesis research.

Dramatic Decline in Gray Bats

I was shocked to find that those ceilings were still stained, showing where tens of thousands of these bats had lived previously.