An all-Ireland charity that promotes the conservation of bats and their habitats

Bat Conservation Ireland

  • Join
  • Donate
  • Shop
  • 0 items€0.00
  • Our Work
        • Monitoring

        • Monitoring and Distribution Projects
        • All Ireland Daubenton’s Bat Waterways Survey
        • Car-based Bat Monitoring
        • Brown Long-eared Bat Roost Monitoring
        • Lesser Horseshoe Bat Roost Monitoring
        • BATLAS 2020
        • Resources

        • Publications
        • Education and Training

        • Learn About Bats website
        • Gardening for Bats
        • Bats and Bugs website
        • Online Training Platform
  • Irish Bats
        • What is a bat?
        • Species
        • Lifecycle
        • Echolocation
        • Distributions
        • Bat Landscapes
        • Bat Hotspots
        • How are Irish bats doing?
  • Advice
        • Common questions answered
        • Found a Bat?
        • Bats and Development
        • FAQs
  • Get Involved
        • Become a Member
        • Donate
        • Volunteer Your Time
        • Request a bat walk, talk or other event
        • Share your bat knowledge
        • Summer Bat Count
        • Bat Sightings
        • Funding for Bat Projects
        • How to Watch Bats
        • Gardening for Bats
        • Creating Roosts – Bat Boxes
        • Bats and Farming
        • Bats and Forestry
        • Bat Detectors – getting and using them
  • Events & Training
  • Bat Groups
  • About
        • Our people
  • Search
You are here: Home / FAQs

FAQs

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT BATS

Are bats really blind?

No, there is no such thing as a blind bat, except babies when they are born and they open their eyes a day or two after birth. All bats can see, although some species can see better than others.

Are bats flying mice?

No – bats belong to a different group of mammals to rodents, bats are Chiroptera and are, actually, more directly related to humans and other primates than to rodents.

Will bats suck your blood?

Not in Ireland! Vampire bats are found in South and Central America. Irish bats are all insectivorous.

How many kinds of bats are there?

Around the world there have been over 1,200 species identified but in Ireland we have just 9 resident species.

What are bats good for?

In Ireland, all bats are insectivorous so they carry out an important job eating lots of insects that would otherwise be harmful or annoying to us humans, such as mosquitoes, midges, greenfly and the like. Around the world different species are responsible for controlling insect pests, spreading seeds in forests so new trees grow again, pollinating crop plants and much more.

Do bats get caught in your hair?

No!  Bats have no interest in human hair. This myth may come from the fact that insects often swarm over people’s heads at dusk and bats swoop down to eat them. No one from Bat Conservation Ireland (with long or short hair), despite working at times near hundreds of bats in flight, has ever had a bat in their hair or met someone who has!

How many kinds of bats are there in Ireland?

At the last count there were 9 resident species and an additional 2 species have been recorded here but are thought to be vagrants rather than resident.

Bat Conservation Ireland,
Carmichael House,
4-7, North Brunswick Street,
Dublin 7
D07 RHA8

We’re on Facebook and Twitter
As well as Instagram and YouTube

  • My Account
  • Terms & Conditions
  • FAQs
  • Privacy & Security Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Sitemap

Bat Conservation Ireland is a company limited by guarantee not having a share capital, registered in Dublin, Ireland.
Company registration number 494343. Charity Registration Number 20039417.

Copyright © 2026 Bat Conservation Ireland | Website built by Made in Trenbania