Seminole bat

Dasypterus Aeorestes L. blossevillii L. frantzii L. borealis L. pfeifferi L. seminolus The Seminole bat was first described in 1895 by Samuel N.

In 1932, the name Lasiurus seminolus was applied to the taxon for the first time by Earl Lincoln Poole.

They have been found to eat relatively large amount of Hymenoptera (ants, bees and wasps), Coleoptera (beetles), Lepidoptera (moths).

[4] It is a migratory species, living along the Gulf Coast, in the Carolinas, and southern Arkansas during the winter.

In winter months they are found to use leaf litter and Spanish moss as insulation in their roost sites.