Organization for Bat Conservation

Organization for Bat Conservation
Focus Environmentalism, Conservation
Location
Origins Bloomfield Hills, Michigan
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Executive Director: Vacant
Website batconservation.org

Organization for Bat Conservation (OBC) was a national environmental education nonprofit based in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan established to educate and inspire people to save bats. In February 2018, it was announced that the Organization was ceasing operations due to unexpected financial problems and personnel changes.

History

Founded in 1992, OBC is a leading environmental educator focused on bats. Its home base is at the Cranbrook Institute of Science in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, where OBC operates the Bat Zone, a live animal center with approximately 200 animals including bats from around the world and other nocturnal animals. Each year, thousands of visitors come to the Bat Zone to attend tours and participate in live animal educational programs. OBC educators travel throughout the country to present education programs to children and adults at schools, festivals, museums, science and nature centers each year.

OBC also organizes and participates in several special events. The Annual Great Lakes Bat Festival, started in 2002, was created to celebrate the role of bats in the Great Lakes ecosystem as insect eaters, while dispelling misconceptions that generate fears and threaten bats and their habitats around the world. The goal of the festival is to help people understand the impact to natural ecosystems and human economies should bat populations continue to decline.

OBC also shares its mission through print and television appearances including The Tonight Show, The Ellen Degeneres Show, The Today Show, Live with Regis and Kelly, Late Night with Conan O’Brien, Fox & Friends, The Doctors, National Geographic TV, and Martha Stewart Living.

Rob Mies was removed from his position as Executive Director of OBC in February 2018. Shortly after his dismissal, OBC announced that it would cease operation due to unexpected financial struggles. Mies disagrees with the decision to dissolve OBC, and has called for the resignation of its board members to save the organization.[1]

National Conservation Campaign

In September 2014, OBC launched a new public action campaign called Save the Bats. Save the Bats is aimed at preventing the decline of bat populations. Save the Bats encourages people to take local action to conserve bats, including installing bat houses, planting wildlife gardens, and teaching others about the importance of bats. The campaign has many celebrity, government agency and corporate supporters.

In addition, OBC and Warner Brothers Entertainment worked together on the set of Batman v Superman Dawn of Justice to re-purpose parts of the movie set into bat houses. Director Zack Snyder contacted OBC when he heard about bats dying off from White-nose Syndrome and enlisted Rob Mies, OBC Executive Director, to assist in the bat house design and construction. More than 150 bat houses were made on the movie set in Pontiac, some of which were painted and signed by Zack, Amy Adams, and Ben Affleck. The bat houses will be auctioned off to support the Save the Bats campaign. Warner Brothers released a short PSA documenting the bat house build featuring Ben Affleck encouraging people to join the campaign. To date, more than 1,000,000 people have viewed the video.

Property acquisition

In August 2017, Organization for Bat Conservation purchased the mineral rights for Magazine Mine, a silica mine in southern Illinois. Magazine Mine is one of the largest Indiana bat hibernacula in the world.[2]

Collaborative worldwide conservation projects

North America

Africa

Asia

Australia

References

  1. Abdel-Baqui, Omar (20 February 2018). "Popular Bat Zone faces shutdown after co-founder terminated". Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  2. "The Organization for Bat Conservation Acquires the Magazine Mine". batconservation.org. Organization for Bat Conservation. 30 August 2017. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  3. Organization for Bat Conservation, Bat Conservation Journal, Summer 2009 Issue
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