Down a narrow gravel drive and a short walk past cactus and scrub cedars outside San Antonio is a gaping, dark cave mouth, 60 feet wide, nestled at the bottom of a steep hill.

This is the Bracken Bat Cave. Each night at 7:30, millions of bats spiral out of the deep cave and streak off toward the darkening Southern sky.

Thanks to a $20 million deal signed Friday by San Antonio, conservation groups and a local developer, the night sky around the cave will stay dark, and the mother and baby bats inside will have a buffer between them and the hazards of city sprawl.

A Massive Bat Maternity Ward

Bracken Cave is a massive maternity ward for pregnant females coming back after wintering in Mexico, says Fran Hutchins, coordinator of the cave for Bat Conservation International.

"Bracken Cave is the largest colony of bats in the world, somewhere between 15 and 20 million Mexican free-tail bats," Hutchins says. "So they deposit the baby in what we call the nursery section of the cave, which is just millions of hairless baby bats, so when you look at it, it's a ceiling of pink, hairless baby bats."

In wave after wave, for almost four hours every night, the adult bats fly off to the cotton and cornfields in south Texas, looking for food.

"A nursing mom is generating at least her weight in milk every day, and she's going to eat her body weight in bugs every night," Hutchins says. "So this colony alone, that's 100 tons of bugs every night."

Threatened By Development

The cave sits within a preserve, but next to the preserve is a tract of land, and last year a developer started advertising plans to build 3,500 homes there, alarming conservationists. BCI Executive Director Andy Walker says bats are attracted to houses and light.

"We would have had hundreds of bats congregating on the porches, around street lights, around swimming pools," Walker says. "Baby bats that were either resting or sick, or older bats that were sick, might be found by family pets and brought into houses."

As conservationists worried about the impact on bats, health officials worried about the potential for the bats to spread rabies to humans. Bat defenders sprang into action.

San Antonio Councilman Ron Nirenberg went to the cave for the first time, to see what the buzz was all about.

"I could describe it as a spiritual experience," Nirenberg says. "I mean, this is the glory of the Texas hill country, and if you're not moved to action to keep this a part of our Texas hill country for our enjoyment and the enjoyment of future generations, then you probably should check your pulse."

So Nirenberg teamed up with two counties, conservation groups, donors and others to come up with money to buy the land from the developer and create a bigger buffer zone for the bat cave.

"Putting this deal together has been no small task," Nirenberg says. "We worked for more than a year to coordinate what at many times has felt like an uphill battle if not a hopeless situation."

The developer wouldn't comment for this story.

The Nature Conservancy was a lead player in the deal. It will manage the property and create hiking trails across the 5,000-acre swath of land that now protects the bat cave. Cities rarely get the opportunity to preserve such treasures, says Conservancy Director Laura Huffman.

"It's in one of the fastest-growing areas of the country," Huffman says. "The ability to protect this intact natural resource and this incredible congregation of mammals is magical."

Copyright 2015 Texas Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.tpr.org/.

Transcript

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

On Friday, the city of San Antonio struck a $20 million deal with conservation groups and a local developer that expands the preserve around a world famous bat cave - no, not that bat cave - a pretty important one. Texas Public Radio's Eileen Pace reports.

EILEEN PACE, BYLINE: Down a narrow gravel drive and a short walk past the cactus and scrub seeders is a gaping dark mouth, 60-feet wide, nestled at the bottom of a steep hill. This is the Bracken Bat Cave. Each night at 7:30, millions of bats spiral out of the deep cave and streak off toward the darkening southern sky.

FRAN HUTCHINS: The Bracken Cave is the largest colony of bats in the world - somewhere between 15 and 20 million Mexican free-tail bats.

PACE: Fran Hutchins, of Bat Conservation International, says Bracken Cave is a massive maternity ward for pregnant females coming back after wintering in Mexico.

HUTCHINS: So they deposit the baby in what we call a nursery section of the cave, which is just millions of hairless baby bats. So when you look at it, it's a ceiling of pink, hairless baby bats.

PACE: In wave after wave for almost four hours, the bats fly off to the cotton and corn fields in South Texas looking for food.

HUTCHINS: A nursing mom is generating at least her weight in milk every day and she's going to eat her body weight in bugs every night. So this colony alone that's a hundred tons of bugs every night.

PACE: The bat cave sits within a preserve, but next to the preserve is attractive land. And last year developers started advertising plans to build 3,500 homes there. That got conservationists worried. Andy Walker, of Bat Conservation International, says Mexican free-tail bats are attracted to houses and light.

ANDY WALKER: We would've had hundreds of bats congregating on the porches, around streetlights, around swimming pools. Maybe bats that were either resting or sick or older bats that were sick might be found by family pets and brought into houses.

PACE: As conservationists worried about the impact on the bats, health officials worried about the potential for the bats to spread rabies to humans. Bat defenders sprang into action. San Antonio councilman Ron Nirenberg went to the cave for the first time to see what the buzz was all about.

COUNCILMAN RON NIRENBERG: When I came out to the Bracken Bat Cave for the very first time I could describe it as a spiritual experience. I mean, this is the glory of the Texas Hill Country. And if you're not moved to action to keep this a part of our Texas Hill Country for our enjoyment and the enjoyment of future generations then you probably should check your pulse.

PACE: So Nirenberg teamed up with two counties, conservation groups and others to come up with money to buy the land from the developer and create a bigger buffer zone for the bat cave.

NIRENBERG: We've worked for more than a year to coordinate what, at many times, has felt like an uphill battle, if not a hopeless situation.

PACE: The developer wouldn't comment for the story. Laura Huffman, state director of the Nature Conservancy, says it's rare that cities get this kind of opportunity.

LAURA HUFFMAN: The ability to protect this intact natural resource and this incredible congregation of mammals is magical.

PACE: The Nature Conservancy was a lead player in the deal that closed on Halloween. It will manage the property and create hiking trails across a 5,000 acre swath of land that now protects the bat cave. For NPR News, I'm Eileen Pace in San Antonio. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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