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A new study from Tel Aviv University reveals that the Greater Mouse-Tailed Bat (Rhinopoma microphyllum) uses its long tail as ...
1mon
The Cool Down on MSNScientists stunned by rare sighting of creature thought to be extinct for decades: 'A remarkable discovery'Conservationists have spotted a female greater mouse-eared bat in disused railway tunnels in Sussex, potentially offering a ...
2mon
talker on MSNLoneliest bat finally finds mate in time for Valentine’s DayBritain's loneliest bat may have finally found a mate just in time for Valentine's Day after flying solo for over 30 years. Just one male greater mouse-eared bat has been found across the country ...
A new study from Tel Aviv University reveals that the greater mouse-tailed bat (Rhinopoma microphyllum) uses its long tail as a natural tactile sensor to navigate backward in dark caves.
Scientists of the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology have now confirmed this finding after conducting research on the ability of greater mouse-eared bats to find their way home at night after ...
To get a better understanding of bat echolocation, Stidsholt and other researchers traveled to the Orlova Chuka cave in Bulgaria, where a colony of greater mouse-eared bats (Myotis myotis) live. There ...
Four of the nine species of Adirondack bats belong to the genus Myotis, the mouse-eared bats. The little brown bat is the most abundant of the four, and is the common bat of the region. During the ...
As thousands of bats launch nightly hunting, the cacophony of a dense crowd should stymie echolocation, a so-called “cocktail party nightmare.” ...
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