Seminole bat facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Seminole bat |
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Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Genus: |
Lasiurus
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Species: |
seminolus
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The Seminole bat (Lasiurus seminolus) is a type of bat in the family Vespertilionidae.
Description
The Seminole bat is often confused with the red bat. The Seminole bat has a mahogany color with a frosted look because to white tipped dorsal hairs. They weigh around 12 grams. Females are larger than males.
Distribution and Habitat
The Seminole bat is found in the Southeastern United States. This includes Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina and parts of Texas, Tennessee, Arkansas and North Carolina. It has also been seen as far as Mexico. It is a migratory species. In the winter, it lives along the Gulf Coast, North and South Carolina, and southern Arkansas. In the summer, they migrate as far north as Missouri and Kentucky.
It prefers to live in forested areas. In winter, they are found to use leaf litter and Spanish moss as insulation in their roost sites.
Feeding
Seminole bats are insectivores. They eat large amounts of Hymenoptera (ants, bees and wasps), Coleoptera (beetles), Lepidoptera (moths). They have also been shown to eat smaller amounts of Homoptera (cicadas) and Diptera (flies).
See also
In Spanish: Lasiurus seminolus para niños