Bat boxes and beach cleanups: Summer work for St. Alban's Green Team - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 15, 2024, 12:21 AM | Calgary | -4.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Bat boxes and beach cleanups: Summer work for St. Alban's Green Team

A team of students on Newfoundland's south coast is doing more than beach cleanups this summer: they're also working to protect the bat population.

Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro renovations mean bats have to be relocated

The St. Alban's Green Team organizes beach cleanups along Newfoundland's south coast, but that's not all they do. (Newfoundland Aquaculture Industry Assoc.)

A group of students on Newfoundland'ssouth coast is doing more than beach cleanups this summer: the Green Team in St.Alban'sis also working to protect the area's brown bat population.

"Bats just won't hurt you. They're prettyharmless," said team memberJulie Young.

Young told CBC Radio'sCentral Morning Showthat bat conservation became part of the job at the request of Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro, one of the team's sponsors.

The Green Team was asked to build bat boxes, because the hydroelectric station where the animals now nest is being renovated. (Newfoundland Aquaculture Industry Assoc.)

"They asked us to build alternate bat habitats because they are doing some renovations to their generating station,and they're afraid of disrupting some bat habitats, so we are building some alternate shelters called bat boxes."

The boxes are nearly as big as a person.

"They are tall and they have chambers inside for the bats to roost life is good, they're happy in there," said Young.

While three types of bats live in the province, she said brown bats are the most common and not very scary because they are sosmall.

Construction materials to cars

Besides building bat boxes, theGreen Team has been hard at work this summer organizing shoreline cleanups around the Coast of Bays area, fromConneRiver toGaultois.

The St. Alban's Green Team beach cleanups have netted everything from household debris to an old car. (Newfoundland Aquaculture Industy Assoc.)

"It's a bit of a daunting task at first, not going to lie, but when it all comes together, it's really nice," said Young.

The team has found the expected litter "rope and plastic, construction material as well as household debris that sometimes blows off landfills into our oceans," Young said.

But some of what they found wasnot so expected.

"Last year me and my boss Robertafound a caran abandoned car, it was old. I hauled a piece off it," said Young.

The car was too heavy to move, but the Green Team was able to get rid of pieces that posed a hazard.

'Passionate about the environment'

Students will sort through the garbage they collect this summer to bringmore information to the public.

The St. Alban's Green Team is building bat boxes for bats that have to move out of the local hydroelectric station because of renovations. (Newfoundland Aquaculture Industry Assoc.)

"Me and my team members will analyze all the debris found to find out where it came from and how we can prevent it from ending up on our beaches again," said Young, who is an engineering student at Memorial University.

"I'm really passionate about the environment because this is going to be our world."

The Green Team is a project oftheConservation Corps Newfoundland and Labrador.

With files from Central Morning Show