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Photo credit: BLM California

Lasiurus xanthinus

Order: Chiroptera

Suborder: Yangochiroptera

Family: Vespertilionidae

Call characteristics:

High frequency caller (~50 kHz range)

Weight

  1/3 - 4/5 oz

(9.2 - 22.5 g)

Length

4 - 4 1/3 in

(10 – 11 cm)



There are various sources for bat species range maps including IUCN, NatureServe, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ECOS, and the National Atlas of the United States

Western Yellow Bat

Western Yellow Bat

The western yellow bat has blonde fur, darkened in the vicinity of its ears. Found throughout Mexico and the southwestern United States, it occupies a large range of habitats including riparian woodlands, desert regions, and tropical forests. The western yellow bat roosts in trees and within dead palm fronds, well-camouflaged by its yellowish fur. This bat migrates south for the winter but does not hibernate. Beetles are the main food source of western yellow bats though they will eat other insects. Mothers usually rear two to four pups annually.

Information used to populate this page was obtained from the following sources:
NatureServe Explorer
United States Fish and Wildlife Service Environmental Conservation Online System
Bat Conservation International Bat Profiles
National Atlas of the United States. (2011). North American Bat Ranges, 1830-2008. National Atlas of the United States. Available at: http://purl.stanford.edu/pz329xp4277.
Taylor, M. 2019. Bats: an illustrated guide to all species. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books.

Conservation Status

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