View allAll Photos Tagged BAT
One evening, I was sitting on the deck watching the sun go down, when a HUGE bird flew into the palm trees in front of me. I jumped up to get a closer look and realized that it was a BAT hanging there! It stayed there a while, feeding on the palm berries/fruit/seeds. They are called Monkey Faced Fruit Bats.The pictures I took were not that great because it was super low light and I didn't want to mess with my settings and miss out on the photos.
Especie 415 de mi colección de Aves del Ecuador.
Species 415 from my collection of Birds of Ecuador.
The Archaeological Sites of Bat, Al-Khutm and Al-Ayn are a group of beehive tombs or necropolis from the Hafit period in the 3rd Millennium BC. They were declared World Heritage by UNESCO. The partially destructed beehive tombs are what you can see as accumulation of stones in the center and on the top of the hill.
Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeological_Sites_of_Bat,_Al-Khu...
Bat-eared Foxes, Auob riverbed, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park.
These nocturnal animals are mostly seen in the early mornings or late afternoons. When foraging they position their ears towards the ground to pick up sounds made by invertebrates - their main food source is harvester termites. Having tiny teeth their diet is restricted to insects, small rodents and fruit.
Bat-eared foxes are endemic to Africa. There are two subspecies: Otocyon megalotis megalotis is found throughout South Africa, Namibia and Botswana, and Otocyon megalotis virgatus is found in Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.
© Gerda van Schalkwyk. All rights reserved.
Notre petit dîner croisière sur les canaux d'Amsterdam a été très agréable. On en a profité pour admirer ses abords avec ses ponts en enfilade et ses bâtiments pittoresques.
Took this a good while ago. Gordon, Huntress and Michael Lane have actually all gotten significant updates since this was taken but ah well. I don't want to set em all up again.
Anyways, just wanted to get this out of my files and into my photo-stream. Cheers, folks!
Architecte : Jacques-Germain SOUFFLOT ( 1761)
Edifié depuis le moyen âge par une progression architecturale, ce lieu a une fonction d'hôpital. François RABELAIS y a été nommé (1532) médecin avec une vingtaine de religieuses. Soufflot réalise le bâtiment actuel qui en 2015 devient un hotel de luxe, une offre de bureaux et commerces ainsi qu'une cité de la gastronomie.
Ages by an architectural progression, this place has a hospital function. François RABELAIS was appointed (1532) doctor there with around twenty nuns. Soufflot is building the current building which in 2015 became a luxury hotel, an office and retail offering as well as a city of gastronomy.
We can't pack emotion
Dynamite, we just might
So blow us a kiss, blow us a kiss
Blow us a kiss, and we'll blow you to pieces
✺} F E A T U R I N G {✺
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Glasses | Violetility Bat Glasses
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Find the full credits and product reviews on PERENNIAL PANIQ.
a nice encounter with a bat-eared fox family on our way back to the camp. these foxes are mainly nocturnal and leave their den at dusk. Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, South Africa
Photos Carol took of bats outside of Tucson in 2018 - Bats are one of the most iconic figures of Halloween. Feared for their thirst for blood and tendency to surprise unsuspecting hikers who disturb their slumber, bats give people the heebie jeebies. But that is not fair.
Arizona is home to 28 species of bats, more than almost any other state. Bats are the only true flying mammals and are valuable human allies. Worldwide, they are primary predators of vast numbers of insect pests, saving farmers and foresters billions of dollars annually and helping to control insect-spread human diseases. For example, large colonies of Mexican free-tailed bats eat hundreds of tons of moths each week, especially the moths that prey on cotton crops. Bats can eat up to 1,200 mosquitoes in an hour.
Although bats play key roles in keeping insect populations in balance, they are North America’s most rapidly declining land mammals. Declines are often caused by human fear and persecution, and each of us can help by learning how to live with these animals.
The Pallid bat has yellowish brown to cream colored fur on its back and white fur on its belly. What is most noticeable about this bat are its large ears. The ears are almost half as long as the total length of its head and body. Because they have such large ears they are able to detect the sound of their prey's footsteps on the ground. Also, its eyes are larger than most species of North American bats. Pallid bats are social creatures and live in groups. Their groups are called colonies. And the size of these colonies can range anywhere from 12-100 individuals. Most of these colonies have more than 20 bats. The largest recorded colony had 162 individuals.
Pallid bats weigh 0.7-1.2 oz. (20-35g). A pallid bat can eat half of its body weight in one night. Imagine people doing that! The pallid bat may live as many as 10 years in the wild.
Pallid bats are also more effective pollinators than some of the nectarivorous bats with whom they compete for cacti. By eating fruit and nectar from plants, bats carry seeds and pollen to new places. Not so scary anymore, huh? Well, there is one thing about bats that's pretty scary…it's that they are disappearing.
Bats aren't really blind—in fact, the larger species of bats can see better than humans—but in order to "see" in absolute darkness, they use echolocation, which means they emit high-pitched sounds (inaudible to the human ear) and listen as the sound waves bounce off nearby surfaces. In fact, with echolocation bats can see everything but color and detect obstacles as fine as a human hair. Pretty cool! So the next time someone calls you "blind as a bat," you can go ahead and take it as a compliment.
Pallid bats are a unique bat species because they are heterothermic, meaning they can be either poikilothermic or homoeothermic depending on the time of year.
From this angle the peaks of The Cobbler (Ben Arthur), top left of picture, look to my mind as resembling the 'bat signal' from Batman, or am I mad (rhetorical question). Taken from the top of Ben A'an in The Trossachs, Scotland.
Another Bat-Sunday rock concert.
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I am (very slowly!!!) starting to disassemble my Space 2019 builds and packing them away.
It will take a long time, because I want to pack them in their original form and in numbered bags like they were when I bought them.
Figuring out what I have modified in the last year and digging up all the original bricks is taking a lot of time.
But building the sets once more in their original form is fun again.
All in all it will take several months before I am completely ready to let go of space 2019. It is just not that interesting for images I thing.
Un Bat-Day para el Bat-Estreno de la ultima peli de Batman no es completo si no te comes un Bat-Menu
Tacca chantrieri
(Common names: Bat Flower, Cats Whiskers, Devil Flower)
A most unusual plant introduced from parts of Malaysia, India, and East Asia, the Bat Plant will make you look twice. The main attraction of the plant is the strange, unique, purple-black flowers. The flowers superficially resemble a bat in flight with long whiskers, and can grow up to 10 inches long. Taccas can be picky about their environmental conditions; however they grow fast and flower a lot when the conditions are just right. The Bat Plant should be planted in partial shade and in a humid and warm environment. Soil should remain consistently moist, not allowing the plant to dry out between waterings. In winter months, when temperatures drop to 40F or lower, the Bat Plant should be moved indoors, or into a greenhouse to protect it from cold damage. Makes a great container plant and is a real conversation piece.
Long-tongued bat (Glossophaga soricina) feeding from nectar of a flowering tree at the Braulio Carrillo National Park in Costa Rica.
Bats play an important role in many environments around the world. Some plants depend partly or wholly on bats to pollinate their flowers or spread their seeds, while other bats also help control pests by eating insects.
You can also see why their are called Long-tongued bats here.
This is the entire Bat Family: all the figures I've posted in the last few days, plus the pets/mites. I thought it would be cool to post them all together like this as a full family shot!
(In case you can't tell, the base is in the shape of a Bat-symbol.)
I'll probably come back and edit in the full list of figs, but you'll have to go back to the others for now if you need to identify someone.
Left to right for pets:
Baby Goliath, Ace the Bat-Hound, Alfred the cat, the Bat-cow, and Bat-Mite.
Part 7 of 7.
Megan:
- Vamos Bater!!!!!!!!!
Columbia:
- Olha pra frente Corine!!!!!!!!!
Corine:
- Comofasprapararessecarrominhagente?