Assistant Professor Anna Doty and her students study bats across California, revealing how these docile creatures benefit ...
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From the vault: Why bats don’t fly in the rainThis article was originally published in 2011 and has been reedited. On rainy nights, the sky belongs to the raindrops. Birds have settled in, insects hide, and bats—nature’s only furry flying ...
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Mexican long-nosed bats are no strangers to southeastern Arizona. The proof is in the salivaFLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — Scientists have long suspected that Mexican long-nosed bats migrate through southeastern Arizona, but without capturing and measuring the night-flying creatures, proof ...
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