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BATS BY DEBBIE DEAN
In the distant past, many people thought bats had magical powers, but times have changed. Today, many people believe
that bats are rodents, that they cannot see, and that they are more likely than other animals to carry rabies. All of these
beliefs are mistaken. Bats are not rodents, are not blind, and are no more likely than dogs and cats to transmit rabies.
Bats, in fact, are among the least understood and least appreciated of animals. Bats are not rodents with wings, contrary
to popular belief. Like all rodents, bats are mammals, but they have a skeleton similar to the human skeleton. The bones
in bat wings are much like those in arms and the human hand, with a thumb and four fingers. In bats, the bones of the
arms and the four fingers of the hands are very long. This bone structure helps support the web of skin that stretches from
the body to the ends of the fingers to form wings. Although bats cannot see colors, they have good vision in both dim and
bright light. Since most bats stay in darkness during the day and do their feeding at night, they do not use their vision to
maneuver in the dark but use a process called echolocation. This process enables bats to emit sounds from their mouths
that bounce off objects and allow them to avoid the objects when flying. They use this system to locate flying insects to
feed on as well. Typically, insect-eating bats emerge at dusk and fly to streams or ponds where they feed. They catch the
insects on their wingtip or tail membrane and fling them into their mouths while flying. There are about 1,000 species of
bat, ranging in size from the bumblebee bat, which is about an inch long, to the flying fox, which is sixteen inches long and
has a wingspan of five feet. Each type of bat has a specialized diet. For seventy percent of bats, the diet is insects. Other
types of bats feed on flowers, pollen, nectar, and fruit or on small animals such as birds, mice, lizards, and frogs. One
species of bat feeds on the blood of large mammals. This is the common vampire bat, which lives only in Latin America
and is probably best known for feeding on the blood of cattle. Unfortunately, in an attempt to control vampire bat
populations, farmers have unintentionally killed thousands of beneficial fruit-and insect-eating bats as well. Bats, in fact,
perform a number of valuable functions. Their greatest economic value is in eliminating insect pests. Insect- eating bats
can catch six hundred mosquitoes in an hour and eat half their body weight in insects every night. In many tropical rain
forests, fruit eating bats are the main means of spreading the seeds of tropical fruits. Nectar-feeding bats pollinate a
number of tropical plants. If it were not for bats, we might not have peaches, bananas, mangoes, guavas, figs, or dates.
Today, the survival of many bat species is uncertain. Sixty percent of bats do not survive past infancy. Some are killed by
predators such as owls, hawks, snakes and other meat-eating creatures, but most are victims of pesticides and other
human intrusions. In Carlsbad Caverns, New Mexico, where there were once eight million bats, there are now a quarter
million. At Eagle Creek, Arizona, the bat population dropped from thirty million to thirty thousand in six years. Bats often
have been burdened with a bad reputation, perhaps because they are not the warm, cuddly sort of animal we love to love.
However, their unusual physical features should not lead us to overestimate their harm or to underestimate their value.
1. What is the text about?
2. Who is the author of the text?
3. How is the bat being described?
4. What are the characteristics of a bat?
5. What can you say about the thought of people saying that bats had magical
powers?
Answers & Comments
Answer:
1.about bats
2.Debbie Dean
3.by their physical
4.bats have magical powers,but sometimes have changed.bats are rodent,they cannot see,like other animals,bats carries their babies too.
5.that belief was mistaken
Explanation:
HOPE IT HELPS