
"A colony of just 100 little brown bats may consume a quarter of a million mosquitoes and other small insects in a night," Miguel Saviroff, agricultural financial manager at Penn State Cooperative Extension in Somerset County, told the Gazette.
Since bats consume as many as 500 insects an hour or 3,000 insects per night, fewer bats may lead to larger bug populations and larger pesticide bills for farmers, Schwartzel reports. Bats save farmers about $74 per acre, according to a county-by-county analysis of their economic value in the April 2011 issue of Science magazine. For all of Pennsylvania, that means an estimated savings of $277.9 million in avoided costs. (Read more) Here's the county-by-county estimate; click on the map to see a larger version.
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