(via mizax)
Source: beezeeart
theworldisanapple-youareaseed:
Pregnant Ghost Bat having an ultrasound at Featherdale Wildlife Park
congrats it’s a bat
[delighted bat noises]
(via allisonpregler)
Source: dailytelegraph.com.au
Call of the Bloom: Some tropical flowers reflect sound so nectar-seeking bats can find them more easily.
Nature’s inventiveness knows no bounds. Consider the case of the nectar-drinking bat and the night-flowering vine whose lives intertwine in the lowland tropical forests of Central America.
Glossophaga commissarisi, a tiny, winged mammal with a body no bigger than your thumb, flits among the flowers of Mucuna holtonii, lapping nectar, much as hummingbirds and bumblebees do. In exchange it pollinates the plant. In daylight flowers can flaunt their wares with bright colors such as scarlet and fuchsia, but at night, when even the brightest hues pale to a moonlit silver, Mucuna flowers resort to sound to catch the ear of nectar bats.
At La Selva Biological Station in northern Costa Rica a vigorous old Mucuna has woven a leafy ceiling above a forest clearing and lowered dozens of flowers into the opening on long, green stalks. The flowers dangle at staggered heights in the vaulted clearing like chandeliers in a shadowy ballroom, each palm-size inflorescence a whorl of pale yellow, pea-pod-shaped buds on arched stems.
At dusk the vine’s buds ready themselves for bats. First the topmost, greenish petal that caps a bud slowly opens vertically, to stand atop the blossom as a glossy beacon. Below the beacon petal, two tiny side petals wing apart, revealing a crack at the top of the pea pod. From this slit wafts a faint, come-hither scent of garlic, a long-distance signal that draws the Mucuna’s winged servants into earshot.
Bats use high-frequency sound as a tool. With their vocal cords, they bang out short, swift bursts through their nostrils or mouths, molding airwaves and interpreting the pattern changes that ricochet back to their sensitive ears. The incoming information is processed fast and continually, allowing bats to adjust their course in mid-flight as they streak through the air after a mosquito or race among flowering trees.
Most bats feed on insects, and they often use powerful, long-range calls, pumped out with every upstroke of their wings. Nectar bats send gentle but very sophisticated calls, which scientists refer to as frequency modulated. These calls trade distance for detail. Most effective within 12 feet, they reflect back pictures that convey precise information about a target’s size, shape, position, texture, angle, depth, and other qualities only a nectar bat can interpret.
photography by Merlin D. Tuttle
(via moreanimalia)
Source: lambandserpent
The Vampire Bat is the only species of bat that has retained its ability to maneuver on land, not only can they walk on land but they can also hop and run at surprisingly fast speeds!
Oh look. Nightmare.
WHAT A CUTIE
Did you know that vampire bats are considered some of the most altruistic species on the planet? The common vampire bat has an incredibly high metabolism, and will die very quickly if it doesn’t feed enough. Colonies of vampire bats have been observed to regurgitate blood for members of the colony who have not fed recently, including non-family members.
Also, lactating female vampire bats will nurse any baby bat who requires milk, including those who are not their own, and orphans.
LIIIIZ
Yes! Good bats, such precious.
Don’t forget that the desmoteplase enzyme in their saliva is an anticoagulating agent that is being researched as an alternative to breaking up blood clots after a stroke. Right now, one of the more common ischemic stroke treatments is very time sensitive, and after a certain period it becomes more harmful than helpful. Desmoteplase only attacks the fibrin of blood clots and shows no significant sign of inducing further brain damage.
So that nightmare might save your life some day. Don’t hate.
this is really cool! i wonder how much we can infer to pterosaur land movement from bats
(via monere-lluvia)
Source: ylatayaeray
Fruit Bats (by Will Burrard-Lucas)
Right this way, sir, your room is ready.
The second GIF, “RAAAHHH UNHAND ME, I AM THE NIGHT!”
Source: batblogging


![toothpast:
“ theworldisanapple-youareaseed:
“ lizzingwithkriz:
“ Pregnant Ghost Bat having an ultrasound at Featherdale Wildlife Park
”
congrats it’s a bat
”
[delighted bat noises]
”](https://66.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_md0a2v5pIH1qmckr5o1_1280.jpg)









