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The Importance of Bats
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# : |
11799 |
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Section : |
NATURAL SCIENCE
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1987 |
2,153 Words |
| Author
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Merlin D. Tuttle Merlin D. Tuttle is founder and science director of Bat
Conservation International in Austin, Texas. |
Contrary to popular misconception, bats are among the most sophisticated, gentle, beneficial, and even likable animals on earth. There are no blind bats. Bats do not become entangled in people's hair, and they pose less of a threat to human health than do household pets.
Like dolphins, bats navigate and communicate using ultrasonic systems so sophisticated that they far surpass current scientific understanding. They also are highly intelligent, even trainable. A highly respected Australian neuroanatomist, John D. Pettigrew, recently discovered that one whole group, the flying foxes, share a unique brain organization previously thought to exist only in primates. This has triggered a heated debate as to whether or not these bats may be primates.
Although most people are aware of only one or two kinds, there are nearly a thousand species of bats, most as yet unstudied. They make up almost a quarter of all mammal species and come in an amazing diversity. They range from the world's smallest mammal - the bumblebee bat of Thailand, which weighs a third less than a penny - to giant flying foxes in Java, with up to six-foot wingspans. They occupy almost every habitat worldwide, except for the most extreme desert and polar regions, and they filled the night's skies long before man walked the earth.
Most are highly specialized for specific life-styles. Some 70 percent of bats eat insects. Many feed on fruit or nectar, and few are carnivores. These range from specialists that use huge feet and claws to gaff fish from ponds to frog-eating bats that use extraordinarily low-frequency hearing to locate and identify frogs by their calls. Despite their
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