Bats Essay, Research Paper
Bats are not blind
They can also “see” in the dark by listening to the echoes of their high frequency calls
With this sophisticated sonar system, called “echolocation” they can pick up insects as tiny as mosquitoes
They also have good steering – they won’t get caught in your hair!
Bats’ wings are giant hands, with skin stretching between elongated fingers
Bats do not build nests; they hang up or creep into cracks and crannies
Bats rarely live in belfries. They prefer somewhere quiet, not draughty, and free from cobwebs
Bats need a wide choice of roost sites as requirements change with the season
Bats often choose modern houses as roost sites – about half of all known pipistrelle bat roosts known in the 1980s were in houses less than 25 years old
In winter, when insects are scarce, bats hibernate in cool parts of buildings, cavesand hollow trees
In Britain it is illegal to disturb bats or the places where they roost
Bats can live for up to 30 years
Of about 4,500 different species of mammal in the world, nearly 1,000 are bats
Three-quarters of these eat insects just as British bats do. In the tropics bats also eat many other foods – fruit, flowers, frogs, fish, blood, even bats!
Bats are vital to rainforests, as many trees need bats for pollination and seed dispersal
Valuable foods and derivatives from bat-adapted plants include dates, vanilla, bananas, breadfruit, guavas, kapok, Iroko timber, balsa wood, sisal – even Tequila and chewing gum!
Bat populations are threatened not only by loss of habitat, affecting roosting sites and feeding grounds, but also by deliberate killing and over-exploitation for food
——————————————————————————–
Bats are not blind
They can also “see” in the dark by listening to the echoes of their high frequency calls
With this sophisticated sonar system, called “echolocation” they can pick up insects as tiny as mosquitoes
They also have good steering – they won’t get caught in your hair!
Bats’ wings are giant hands, with skin stretching between elongated fingers
Bats do not build nests; they hang up or creep into cracks and crannies
Bats rarely live in belfries. They prefer somewhere quiet, not draughty, and free from cobwebs
Bats need a wide choice of roost sites as requirements change with the season
Bats often choose modern houses as roost sites – about half of all known pipistrelle bat roosts known in the 1980s were in houses less than 25 years old
In winter, when insects are scarce, bats hibernate in cool parts of buildings, cavesand hollow trees
In Britain it is illegal to disturb bats or the places where they roost
Bats can live for up to 30 years
Of about 4,500 different species of mammal in the world, nearly 1,000 are bats
Three-quarters of these eat insects just as British bats do. In the tropics bats also eat many other foods – fruit, flowers, frogs, fish, blood, even bats!
Bats are vital to rainforests, as many trees need bats for pollination and seed dispersal
Valuable foods and derivatives from bat-adapted plants include dates, vanilla, bananas, breadfruit, guavas, kapok, Iroko timber, balsa wood, sisal – even Tequila and chewing gum!
Bat populations are threatened not only by loss of habitat, affecting roosting sites and feeding grounds, but also by deliberate killing and over-exploitation for food
——————————————————————————–
Bats are not blind
They can also “see” in the dark by listening to the echoes of their high frequency calls
With this sophisticated sonar system, called “echolocation” they can pick up insects as tiny as mosquitoes
They also have good steering – they won’t get caught in your hair!
Bats’ wings are giant hands, with skin stretching between elongated fingers
Bats do not build nests; they hang up or creep into cracks and crannies
Bats rarely live in belfries. They prefer somewhere quiet, not draughty, and free from cobwebs
Bats need a wide choice of roost sites as requirements change with the season
Bats often choose modern houses as roost sites – about half of all known pipistrelle bat roosts known in the 1980s were in houses less than 25 years old
In winter, when insects are scarce, bats hibernate in cool parts of buildings, cavesand hollow trees
In Britain it is illegal to disturb bats or the places where they roost
Bats can live for up to 30 years
Of about 4,500 different species of mammal in the world, nearly 1,000 are bats
Three-quarters of these eat insects just as British bats do. In the tropics bats also eat many other foods – fruit, flowers, frogs, fish, blood, even bats!
Bats are vital to rainforests, as many trees need bats for pollination and seed dispersal
Valuable foods and derivatives from bat-adapted plants include dates, vanilla, bananas, breadfruit, guavas, kapok, Iroko timber, balsa wood, sisal – even Tequila and chewing gum!
Bat populations are threatened not only by loss of habitat, affecting roosting sites and feeding grounds, but also by deliberate killing and over-exploitation for food
——————————————————————————–
Bats are not blind
They can also “see” in the dark by listening to the echoes of their high frequency calls
With this sophisticated sonar system, called “echolocation” they can pick up insects as tiny as mosquitoes
They also have good steering – they won’t get caught in your hair!
Bats’ wings are giant hands, with skin stretching between elongated fingers
Bats do not build nests; they hang up or creep into cracks and crannies
Bats rarely live in belfries. They prefer somewhere quiet, not draughty, and free from cobwebs
Bats need a wide choice of roost sites as requirements change with the season
Bats often choose modern houses as roost sites – about half of all known pipistrelle bat roosts known in the 1980s were in houses less than 25 years old
In winter, when insects are scarce, bats hiberna
In Britain it is illegal to disturb bats or the places where they roost
Bats can live for up to 30 years
Of about 4,500 different species of mammal in the world, nearly 1,000 are bats
Three-quarters of these eat insects just as British bats do. In the tropics bats also eat many other foods – fruit, flowers, frogs, fish, blood, even bats!
Bats are vital to rainforests, as many trees need bats for pollination and seed dispersal
Valuable foods and derivatives from bat-adapted plants include dates, vanilla, bananas, breadfruit, guavas, kapok, Iroko timber, balsa wood, sisal – even Tequila and chewing gum!
Bat populations are threatened not only by loss of habitat, affecting roosting sites and feeding grounds, but also by deliberate killing and over-exploitation for food
——————————————————————————–
Bats are not blind
They can also “see” in the dark by listening to the echoes of their high frequency calls
With this sophisticated sonar system, called “echolocation” they can pick up insects as tiny as mosquitoes
They also have good steering – they won’t get caught in your hair!
Bats’ wings are giant hands, with skin stretching between elongated fingers
Bats do not build nests; they hang up or creep into cracks and crannies
Bats rarely live in belfries. They prefer somewhere quiet, not draughty, and free from cobwebs
Bats need a wide choice of roost sites as requirements change with the season
Bats often choose modern houses as roost sites – about half of all known pipistrelle bat roosts known in the 1980s were in houses less than 25 years old
In winter, when insects are scarce, bats hibernate in cool parts of buildings, cavesand hollow trees
In Britain it is illegal to disturb bats or the places where they roost
Bats can live for up to 30 years
Of about 4,500 different species of mammal in the world, nearly 1,000 are bats
Three-quarters of these eat insects just as British bats do. In the tropics bats also eat many other foods – fruit, flowers, frogs, fish, blood, even bats!
Bats are vital to rainforests, as many trees need bats for pollination and seed dispersal
Valuable foods and derivatives from bat-adapted plants include dates, vanilla, bananas, breadfruit, guavas, kapok, Iroko timber, balsa wood, sisal – even Tequila and chewing gum!
Bat populations are threatened not only by loss of habitat, affecting roosting sites and feeding grounds, but also by deliberate killing and over-exploitation for food
——————————————————————————–
Bats are not blind
They can also “see” in the dark by listening to the echoes of their high frequency calls
With this sophisticated sonar system, called “echolocation” they can pick up insects as tiny as mosquitoes
They also have good steering – they won’t get caught in your hair!
Bats’ wings are giant hands, with skin stretching between elongated fingers
Bats do not build nests; they hang up or creep into cracks and crannies
Bats rarely live in belfries. They prefer somewhere quiet, not draughty, and free from cobwebs
Bats need a wide choice of roost sites as requirements change with the season
Bats often choose modern houses as roost sites – about half of all known pipistrelle bat roosts known in the 1980s were in houses less than 25 years old
In winter, when insects are scarce, bats hibernate in cool parts of buildings, cavesand hollow trees
In Britain it is illegal to disturb bats or the places where they roost
Bats can live for up to 30 years
Of about 4,500 different species of mammal in the world, nearly 1,000 are bats
Three-quarters of these eat insects just as British bats do. In the tropics bats also eat many other foods – fruit, flowers, frogs, fish, blood, even bats!
Bats are vital to rainforests, as many trees need bats for pollination and seed dispersal
Valuable foods and derivatives from bat-adapted plants include dates, vanilla, bananas, breadfruit, guavas, kapok, Iroko timber, balsa wood, sisal – even Tequila and chewing gum!
Bat populations are threatened not only by loss of habitat, affecting roosting sites and feeding grounds, but also by deliberate killing and over-exploitation for food
——————————————————————————–
Bats are not blind
They can also “see” in the dark by listening to the echoes of their high frequency calls
With this sophisticated sonar system, called “echolocation” they can pick up insects as tiny as mosquitoes
They also have good steering – they won’t get caught in your hair!
Bats’ wings are giant hands, with skin stretching between elongated fingers
Bats do not build nests; they hang up or creep into cracks and crannies
Bats rarely live in belfries. They prefer somewhere quiet, not draughty, and free from cobwebs
Bats need a wide choice of roost sites as requirements change with the season
Bats often choose modern houses as roost sites – about half of all known pipistrelle bat roosts known in the 1980s were in houses less than 25 years old
In winter, when insects are scarce, bats hibernate in cool parts of buildings, cavesand hollow trees
In Britain it is illegal to disturb bats or the places where they roost
Bats can live for up to 30 years
Of about 4,500 different species of mammal in the world, nearly 1,000 are bats
Three-quarters of these eat insects just as British bats do. In the tropics bats also eat many other foods – fruit, flowers, frogs, fish, blood, even bats!
Bats are vital to rainforests, as many trees need bats for pollination and seed dispersal
Valuable foods and derivatives from bat-adapted plants include dates, vanilla, bananas, breadfruit, guavas, kapok, Iroko timber, balsa wood, sisal – even Tequila and chewing gum!
Bat populations are threatened not only by loss of habitat, affecting roosting sites and feeding grounds, but also by deliberate killing and over-exploitation for food
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