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Big Brown
Bats © Merlin D. Tuttle, Bat Conservation International |
Bats have long been
the subject of folklore due to their unusual habits. In an effort to
separate fact from fiction, the following are truths about bats:
- Bats are
not blind. They can see better than humans at night, however
echolocation is their most important sense when hunting.
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The truth about bats and rabies in Alaska. Although
bats can be carriers of rabies, the frequency of this has been greatly
exaggerated in Alaska.
- Bats do
not suck blood or feed on humans. North American bats eat a wide
variety of insects, while those in the tropics also eat fruit. The
vampire bats of South and Central America do feed on blood by making a
small incision through the skin of livestock or birds. They lap
up small amounts of blood through the incision.
- Bats are
not rodents. They are more closely related to primates than to
rodents. They are in their own Order, called Chiroptera.
This means "hand-wing" due to their unique flight abilities with wing
bones that are similar to those in human fingers.
Bat Links
Partners in the Alaska Citizen Science Project:
Last updated August 1, 2008
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