Queen Creek Bat Removal & Control,
Bats In Attic or in Chimney, in AZ.

Call (602) 618-0284

Queen Creek Bat Control and Removal in Queen Creek, Avondale,
Glendale, Scottsdale, Phoenix, Gilbert, Peoria, Tempe, Mesa, and the surrounding Metro area.

Queen Creek Bat Removal & Control in the Queen Creek Area, providing bat removal services from chimney's to walls to attics.Queen Creek Bat Control experts like Arizona Wildlife Control can remove all the bats in your attic, chimney, and walls from your home. If you happen to hear endless scratching or squeaking noises in your home at night, chances are good that these noises are from bats in your home, chimney, walls, or from bats in your attic. We can provide Professional bat control services throughout Queen Creek, Avondale, Chandler, Phoenix, Tempe, Mesa, Glendale, Scottsdale, and Peoria, AZ.

Bats will form into colonies inside your home or attic. This can be a very serious health risk if the problem is not resolved. As the experts in bat removal in Queen Creek, we can get rid of them in your home, or business. We can resolve any and all bat infestations, regardless of their size. These pests are removed from your home in a humane manner. As professionally trained wildlife operators, we will clean up bat guano, repair any type of damage, and prevent the infestation from ever happening to your home or business again.

WE SPECIALIZE IN THE FOLLOWING SERVICES:

  • Removal
  • Control
  • Exclusion
  • Guano Cleanup
  • Removing of Contaminated Insulation

Note: Before you hire a professional bat removal specialist, always check to make sure that the company is fully insured and has a valid Wildlife Removal permit issued from the Arizona Game and Fish Department.

More Information on Bats

Bats are nocturnal by nature. They sleep perched in roosts during the daytime, and emerge at dusk. If it’s a colony of bats living in your home, they will crawl to the edge, and fly out. First they head for water and get a drink, skimming the surface on the wing. They will then feast on flying insects, primarily moths and beetles. After a while they get full and head back to the roost in order to rest. They then fly back out to feed some more. They may make several trips per night. Roosting preference depends on the species and even gender of the bats, but you should only be concerned with colonizing bats. These colonies of bats are composed primarily of females. Most males roost alone in solitary areas, such as trees. The females form huge clusters, very frequently in man-made architecture such as church towers, attics, bridges, etc. Bats tolerate and even prefer very high temperatures. Many of the southern bats migrate to different areas as climates change.