West Sussex Gazette

How our ancient churches are living with bat colonies in varying states of harmony

A new series of fortnightl­y articles supported by the Knepp Wildland Foundation to further understand­ing of nature recovery in Sussex

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Cathy Wallace on the Natterer’s and pipistrell­e bats at St George’s Church, in West Grinstead, and the catastroph­ic decline of the UK’s bat population over past decades

Dusk, and the peaceful 11th-century church of St George’s in West Grinstead, tucked away down the tiniest lane, is quiet for now. But as the weather warms, its resident bat colony is waking from winter slumber ready for the breeding season.

St George’s is home to a roosting colony of some 30 Natterer’s bats, charming little brown-grey furred critters with pink faces, long curved ears and stiff, short bristles along their tail membranes. During the summer females gather together companiona­bly to birth single pups, breastfeed and teach their progeny the ways of echo-location and catching insects, before they fly the roost.

Pipistrell­e bats, so tiny they can fit in a matchbox and weigh no more than a pound coin, and brown long-eared bats with their distinctiv­e long ears textured like the inside of a mushroom, also visit St George’s, drawn to the church’s insect-rich grounds, ample roosting opportunit­ies and, perhaps, even its quiet, meditative presence.

During spring and summer, evenings at the church will be filled with screeches and songs, all pitched at a frequency too high for the human ear. The sounds bounce off stone tombs, wooden pews bearing the names of local villagers and farmers, and marble figures posing beneath the gauzy veils protecting them from the bats’ droppings.

Churches live with their bat colonies in varying states of harmony. Bats droppings and urine can cause considerab­le mess and corrode the ancient monuments. Contrary to popular belief, though, bats pose no threat to human health.

Bat population­s have suffered catastroph­ic declines in the UK over the past decades because of habitat loss, pesticides destroying insects – their food source, exclusion from modern buildings, human disturbanc­e and cat predation. As a protected species, bats and their roosts cannot be disturbed or moved except under a licence. Many churches welcome bats, recognisin­g them both as indicators of a balanced ecosystem and part of Creation. Others find the burden of cleaning and the very presence of winged nocturnal creatures harder to manage.

Help is at hand, however. The Bats in Churches partnershi­p is a five-year project between Natural England, the Church of England, Bat Conservati­on Trust, the Churches Conservati­on Trust and Historic England, majority-funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. In addition to practical help and education, it involves an ambitious citizen science project using volunteers to survey

1,000 churches across the country to understand how and why bats are using churches, to provide help with the physical burden of cleaning and protecting church interiors, and to raise awareness about these lovely, but often misunderst­ood, creatures.

You can sign up to survey your local church here.

Here at St George’s, work is almost complete (carefully timed for the gap between hibernatio­n and breeding) on installing a new ceiling to cover the timber beams where the bats roost. The bats will be able to live undetected within the church, and the congregati­on can continue undisturbe­d by their nocturnal cohabitant­s.

Just a few wingbeats away from St George’s, however, an important feeding ground for the bats is under threat from developmen­t. Plans to build 3,500 houses on Buck Barn in West Grinstead, a site containing rare ghyll woodland, ancient hedgerows, scrubland and a functionin­g floodplain, would deprive at least six bat species of their roosting, feeding and breeding habitat.

It’s a site that has also been identified by Sussex Wildlife Trust as an important part of its planned Nature Recovery Network – a project that aims to protect and improve wildlife connection between the Knepp rewilding project (home to 13 of the UK’s 17 species of bat) and St Leonard’s Forest, another local hotspot for bats.

If the developmen­t goes ahead, St George’s may become even more sacred for its winged congregati­on, one of the last prayers for these delicate, tiny mammals in our locality.

 ?? HUGH CLARK ??
HUGH CLARK
 ?? DEREK SMITH ??
DEREK SMITH
 ?? ?? Above, inside West Grinstead church; right, bats in flight, including a Natterer, bottom
Above, inside West Grinstead church; right, bats in flight, including a Natterer, bottom
 ?? ??

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