Additional scholarship awards for these workshops are still available for 
suitable candidates beyond the Feb. 15th deadline. Please see the workshops 
webpage for additional information about qualifications (scholarship info 
is located at the bottom of the page under "Fine Print"): 
http://www.batcon.org/home/index.asp?idPage=30&idSubPage=118

Bat Conservation International
2008 BAT CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT WORKSHOPS 

Each year, Bat Conservation International (BCI) offers a series of 
comprehensive, introductory field workshops to train serious students of 
bat conservation in current research and management techniques for the 
study of bats. Following an intensive 6-day, 5-night agenda, BCI biologists 
and professional colleagues will present a combination of lectures and 
discussions, field trips to view bat habitat resources and hands-on 
training to catch and identify bats. Learn species identification, netting, 
radio-tracking, night-vision observation and habitat assessment while 
working in extraordinary settings.

An Arizona workshop in the Chiricahua Mountains emphasizes western bats. 
The Chiricahuas offer a biodiversity unequalled anywhere else in North 
America. You can expect to see, and even to capture and handle, as many as 
18 bat species in a single evening, then watch endangered long-nosed bats 
visit hummingbird feeders at your front door. Participants have also 
enjoyed spotting ring-tailed cats, coatis, and trogans. BCI workshop 
veteran Janet Tyburec, Dr. Katy Hinman and Arizona Game and Fish Department 
biologists will share a wealth of knowledge on species identification 
(including by echolocation calls), bat conservation, management, education, 
public health and nuisance issues, artificial habitats and much more. We 
will stay at the American Museum of Natural History’s famous Southwestern 
Research Station, where you will enjoy superb dining with researchers from 
around the world. Two sessions: May 20-25 and May 25-30, 2008. Each session 
limited to 16 people. Departure city: Tucson, AZ. Cost: $1,395  

A California workshop focuses on the conservation and management of bats in 
the northwest. Set among the rugged backdrop of unique lava formations at 
Lava Beds National Monument, we will have an unparalleled opportunity to 
observe and discuss how variations in cave environments uniquely impact 
where bats roost. In addition to viewing evening bat emergences and 
exploring the unique volcanic formations, we will practice setting nets and 
traps at ice cave entrances, over water resources and wet meadows and in 
mixed pine forests. Townsend’s big-eared bats and colonies of Mexican free-
tailed bats are just two of the 14 bat species we hope to encounter at this 
workshop. Janet Tyburec and local experts lead this workshop, which 
features species identification (including by echolocation calls), bat 
conservation, threats, management, education, public health and nuisance 
issues and much more. Our lodging, located in the heart of the Pacific 
Flyway, is tucked between the Tule Lake and Lower Klamath National Wildlife 
Refuges, both of which boast exceptional waterfowl diversity where bird-
watching and photography opportunities abound. One session: July 19-24, 
2008. Limited to 20 people. Departure city: Medford, OR. Cost: $1,395

Our Pennsylvania workshop highlights eastern bats and their habitats. We’ll 
net, trap and release bats over trout streams and beaver ponds, observe 
endangered Indiana bats swarming at a mine entrance, watch 20,000 little 
brown bats in a spectacular dawn return to their roost at a restored church 
and examine them up close. Workshop co-leader Cal Butchkoski of the 
Pennsylvania Game Commission is a leading expert on surveying and radio-
tracking Indiana bats, as well as one of America’s most successful builders 
of bat houses and other artificial roosts. Cal and Janet Tyburec, joined by 
local consultant John Chenger, will share a wealth of knowledge covering 
all aspects of bat conservation, management, education and public health 
and nuisance issues. Home cooking is but one of many unexpected treats at 
historic Greene Hills Manor, our workshop headquarters. One session: August 
17-22, 2008. Limited to 20 people. Departure city: Harrisburg, PA. Cost: 
$1,395 

2008 ACOUSTIC MONITORING WORKSHOP

In response to many requests, BCI is offering an acoustic monitoring 
workshop session at Lava Beds National Monument in California. The workshop 
will cover hardware and software including Anabat, Pettersson and SonoBat 
and teach call identifications and how to develop a monitoring program. 
Joining BCI's Janet Tyburec will be acoustic software developers Chris 
Corben and Joe Szewczak, along with acoustic experts Sybill Amelon and Ted 
Weller. The format will be similar to BCI's Bat Conservation and Management 
workshops, combining discussions of current research with hands-on 
demonstrations and fieldwork. Each night, we will be capturing bats and 
developing call libraries so participants can return to their home study 
areas and begin their own projects armed with knowledge and experience. BCI 
will have equipment available, but participants are encouraged to bring 
there own systems. The Acoustic Monitoring Workshop is an advanced workshop 
designed for graduates of previous BCI workshops and/or experienced bat 
workers. One session: July 24-29, 2008. Limited to 20 people. Departure 
city: Medford, OR. Cost: $1,595 

For additional information, registration forms and scholarship 
applications, visit www.batcon.org ‘Get Involved’ or contact Kari Gaukler, 
BCI, PO Box 162603, Austin, TX 78716; 512-327-9721; [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

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