Bats Flashcards
What order do bats belong to?
Ciroptera
Only mammals capable of sustained flight
Evolutionary advantages of flight in bats
Can forage widely and rapidly and can escape terrestrial predators
Can traverse fragmented agricultural or urbanised landscapes
Evolutionary advantages of nocturnality in bats
Can access food with less competition
Conserve water and energy by being active in cooler part of day
Can evade diurnal predators
How do bats differ from other small mammals
Bats differ to other small mammals in that they:
- Relatively long-lived
- Slow to reach sexual maturity
- Long gestation
- Small litter size
- Approx 1 birth per year
Megachiroptera (bats)
Young are initially carried by mother then left in nurseries when mother is foraging until capable of independent flight
Diet: Nectivorous, Fruigivorous
E.g. Fruit bats, blossom bats
Short, simple gastro-intestinal tract
Reduced teeth
Short/absent tail
Roost in Large colonies
Microchiroptera (bats)
Young are either in nurseries, or left alone in huge numbers each night from birth
Diet: Insectivorous, carnivorous
Majority of bats
Use echolocation to navigate and hunt
Colony size varies
Roost in sheltered areas
Conserve energy via- aggregation, torpor and hibernation
Reproduction (bats)
Usually seasonal breeders
Long gestation
Many bats hibernate in winter
- Some species - male can store sperm for extended winter periods in the epididymis
- Some species females mater before hibernation, then store sperm in her tract with delayed ovulation and fertilisation in spring
Most have single large young
1 nipple in each axilla
Males are easy to distinguish - obvious penis
Testes can be either internally or externally housed