Juanita Browne: enjoying the night life — tracking down the water bat
Daubenton's bat. Picture: Frank Greenway
Every August, I spend a couple of evenings walking in the darkness along a lonely canal, carrying a torch, clipboard and a small strange device that crackles like an out-of-tune radio. This doesn’t sound like much fun, but it is! I am hunting for bats.
I am one of hundreds of volunteers taking part in the All-Ireland Daubenton’s Bat Survey, run by Bat Conservation Ireland (BCI).
![<p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p> <p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p>](/cms_media/module_img/9930/4965053_12_augmentedSearch_iStock-1405109268.jpg)