A Growing Movement Predicts that the Next Generation of Tequila will Come from an Unlikely Source – Bats

bat friendly

The Bat Friendly Tequila and Mezcal project has brought together scientists, producers, and consumers to open the gates for the cross pollination of agave plants by bats. 

This age-old technique is intended not only to encourage sustainability, but to unlock the next generation of yet-unknown flavors in the tequila industry.

Dr. Roberto Medellin, a Mexican Ecologist widely known as the “Bat Man of Mexico”, has used Bat Friendly as a platform to explain what tequila producers can gain by reincorporating bats into the agave growing process. 

“For 12 million years, bats and agave have been linked. But now, they are stuck,” says Medellin. 

What Do Bats Add to Tequila?

bat friendly

In a typical agave field, growers will prevent their agave plants from flowering in order to preserve the coveted sugar within the agave head – sugar which is crucial for the production of alcohols like tequila and mezcal. 

Since those flowers would otherwise help the plants reproduce, growers instead use the shoots beneath the parent plant to grow future crops. 

In the process, each subsequent agave plant is genetically identical. What’s more, the lack of flowers prevents bats from cross pollinating the plants and creating new breeds of agave. 

To encourage a new generation of undiscovered agave, the Bat Friendly project stamps a shiny label on the bottles of producers who encourage bat cross pollination. Dr Medellin says that the certification for Bat Friendly Tequila and Mezcal is simple. 

“All they need to do is to allow only 5% of their agave plants to flower, let the bats come and pollinate, and use the resulting seeds to replant their fields.” 

Bat Friendly Producers

Photo: Tequila Ocho Mexico

Producers are certainly playing the long game – experts say it may take 80 to 100 years for these new breeds of agave to arise. Still, this hasn’t stopped smaller producers from hedging their bets. 

Don Mateo de la Sierra, a Michoacán based mezcal producer renowned for the dark, earthy flavors produced from their traditional process of roasting agave in volcanic stone, have been a continued partner with Bat Friendly since 2016. 

In collaboration with producers like Don Mateo de la Sierra, Tequila Cascahuin, and Mezcal Vengo, over 300,000 bottles of Bat Friendly tequila have been released into the market. 

Though this trend has been spearheaded by artisanal producers, it appears that the tequila industry as a whole might be taking notice. 

Patrón recently commissioned a study from Mexico’s National Center of Genetic Resources, hoping to analyze blue agave genetics and establish a long-term path for the creation of new agave breeds. 

Soon enough, bats may very well be the secret behind the world’s biggest tequila producers’ new, cutting edge products. 

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Founded by Dan Abrams, The Daily Pour is the ultimate drinking guide for the modern consumer, covering spirits, non-alcoholic and hemp beverages. With its unique combination of cross-category coverage and signature rating system that aggregates reviews from trusted critics across the internet, The Daily Pour sets the standard as the leading authority in helping consumers discover, compare and enjoy the best of today's evolving drinks landscape.

Pedro Wolfe is an editor and content creator at The Daily Pour with a specialty in agave spirits. With several years of experience writing for the New York Daily News and the Foothills Business Daily under his belt, Pedro aims to combine quality reviews and recipes with incisive articles on the cutting edge of the spirits world. Pedro has traveled to the heartland of the spirits industry in Tequila, Mexico, and has conducted interviews with agave spirits veterans throughout Mexico, South Africa and California. Through this diverse approach, The Daily Pour aims to celebrate not only tequila but the rich tapestry of agave spirits that spans mezcal, raicilla, bacanora, pulque and so much more.