In the recent Dark Knight Trilogy, Bruce Wayne re-discovers the underground cave in his manor and then installs lights there as the first step towards building the Batcave. This leads me to the question:
Are the lights and the rest of the Batcave installation bat-friendly, or does the whole setup adversely affect the bats? A character like the Batman must care about animals and the environment; especially ones that inspire his own persona. Did Batman care about how his hideout affected the bats? Is there any treatment of or allusion to the relationship between Batman and the bats living in the Batcave in any of the comics or any other works?
Answer
It's established in Batman #655 that Alfred is in charge of tending to the needs of the bats in the roof of the Batcave.
Since it's a heavy part of the established canon that "The Batcave contains bats" (along with "Bruce's parents are dead" and "Bruce Wayne is Batman") I think we can reasonably assume that the Batcave in the Nolan trilogies is similarly bat friendly.
Purely FYI: The DC Visual dictionary notes that the bats in question are American Brown Bats
"though the scores of American Brown Bats (Myotis lucifugus) perched high above the Batcave floor were a nuisance to Alfred's fastidious cleaning..."
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