Polynesian Sheath-Tailed Bat
Threatened Species Factsheet No. 5
2 pages. pdf
VESS
Threatened Species Factsheet No. 5
2 pages. pdf
VESS
Threatened Species Factsheet No. 4
2pages. pdf
VESS
Threatened Species Factsheet No. 3
2 pages. pdf
VESS
Threatened Species Factsheet No. 2
2 pages. PDF
VESS
The status of the peka on Niue, population survey of the flying fox, pteropus tonganusPopulation estimation|Hunter informationCall Number: [EL]Physical Description: Available online
Bats use sound to hunt a dizzying array of prey. Some zero in on flowers to sip nectar, whereas others find cattle and suck their blood. Many nab insects midflight. One species of bat senses small fish beneath the water and snatches them as osprey do.
A whopping 191 different bat species live in the Pacific Islands across Micronesia, Melanesia, and Polynesia—but these are, collectively, the most imperiled in the world. In fact, five of the nine bat species that have gone extinct in the last 160 years have come from this region.
Scientists have found another piece in the puzzle of how echolocation evolved in bats, moving closer to solving a decades-long evolutionary mystery... An international study led by us, published today in Current Biology, has shown how the capability for sophisticated echolocation n
People living near Lake Tegano, the biggest freshwater lake in the southern hemisphere, have expressed fear at the recent unexpected deaths of flying foxes in the area.
Viruses love bats. The flying nocturnal mammals make outstanding hosts because — just like people — they live in large, dense groups, their air travel spreads germs between populations and their longevity enables a virus to persist for years in an individual animal.