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Missouri woman batty about rescuing, rehabilitating planet’s only flying mammal

By Erin Heffernan, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Published: August 23, 2019, 6:00am
3 Photos
Donna Mowery, from Catawissa, Mo., holds an immature big brown bat July 23 at her home, where she is raising three young bats that she rescued. J.B. Forbes/St.
Donna Mowery, from Catawissa, Mo., holds an immature big brown bat July 23 at her home, where she is raising three young bats that she rescued. J.B. Forbes/St. Louis Post-Dispatch Photo Gallery

FRANKLIN COUNTY, Mo. — Donna Mowery really ought to have her own bat signal.

In the last seven years, Mowery has become the go-to bat rehabilitation expert for greater St. Louis, helping panicked people remove bats from homes and answering nonstop calls to take in bats in need.

“Someone’s got to do it,” she said on a recent morning wearing a T-shirt with the message: “I love bats to the moon and back.”

Bats are vital to the ecosystem, Mowery said. They are pollinators, the earth’s only flying mammals, and a natural insect repellent — one bat will kill thousands of mosquitoes a night. “Their filet mignon is mosquitoes,” she said.

But they’re also in trouble. Some face habitat loss, others serious threats like White Nose Syndrome, a fungal disease that has wiped out millions of bats across the country.

So Mowery takes them into her eastern Franklin County home, raising some for months. Others need quick care, like water and a good meal. She puts in about eight to 10 hours a day caring for infant bats every spring. In the creatures’ first weeks, she and her husband wake up every three hours to give them the round-the-clock feedings they need to survive.

The Mowerys raise them until the bats are old enough to fend for themselves. They first feed the little mammals from a dropper and allow them to learn to fly from side to side in mesh dog carriers. Finally the bats are put in an outside enclosure where they learn to hunt insects and are released.

Mowery’s record year was 2017, when she raised 18 bats at once.

“I remember there were so many that year that I actually snuck a few into the hotel with me when I had to go out of town for business,” Mowery said.

Mowery does all her rehab work as a volunteer, on top of a full-time job in operations management and her role as a grandmother to eight.

But to her it’s worth it.

“I want to make sure there are still bats around for them,” she said, pointing to her grandkids.

Getting the bat call

Mowery’s home is no gothic bat lair. The couple live in an airy country house with a big porch in Catawissa, about 40 miles southwest of St. Louis.

The only signs of Mowery’s volunteer work are her stores of mealworms, which she orders by the ten thousand; the baby food applesauce that goes into a mix to feed her youngest patients; and the three juvenile big brown bats she is rehabilitating in a puppy carrier in a spare room.

Mowery always loved bats as a girl growing up in Missouri, but came to actually welcome them in her home after she and her husband completed the Missouri Master Naturalist program nine years ago.

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Through the program, the couple met Kirsten Alvey-Mudd, who runs the Missouri Bat Census, a network of volunteers working on bat conservation around the state.

Mowery started by accompanying Alvey-Mudd on bat surveys. In the middle of the night, the group sets up nets to capture bats. By the light of flashlights, they take measurements and record key information before releasing the bats back into the wild.

The data help track trends in bat species diversity and monitor the spread of diseases like White Nose Syndrome.

Mowery soon began helping with Alvey-Mudd’s rehab work raising bats, learning everything that goes into their care.

“I started to realize maybe this is something I want to do,” she said. As far as she knew, there were no bat rehabbers in the St. Louis region.

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