Showing posts with label wax pencils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wax pencils. Show all posts
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Winged mammals

This year I raised baby bats, and so had the opportunity to observe more closely these curious micromammals. They are so micro, I had to take pictures in order to sketch them!
Feeding them milk with a micropipette, while looking at how they move and respond, was a fascinating experience.
This little guy is a pup of Kuhl's bat. As adults, they can be identified by a white line on the edge of their wing membrane.

Bats have good vision, but depend on echolocation to navigate and hunt down their prey. When the bat emits a sound wave, he than listens for the returning echo, which conveys

The many folds present in the bat's ears help the animal determine the insect vertical position.
With a body length of 3 and half inches and a wing length of 2 and half inches at the most, the European Free-tailed Bat, on the left, is one of the largest bat species to be found in Europe, Asia and Africa.
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