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fishing bats have echolocation so sophisticated that they can detect a minnow's fin as fine as a human hair, protruding only two millimeters above a pond's surface. |
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Tadarida brasiliensis
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Common Name: Mexican free-tailed bat
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Tadarida
Free-Tailed Bats (Molossidae)
Tadarida brasiliensis
Mexican free-tailed bat
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Family: Molossidae Genus: Tadarida Species: brasiliensis
Pronunciation: ta-dare-a-dah bra-zill-ee-en-sis
Common name: Mexican free-tailed bat
Mexican free-tailed bats occupy a wide variety of habitats, ranging from desert communities through pinion-juniper woodland and pine-oak forests at elevations from sea level to 9,000 feet or more. The largest U.S. populations of free-tailed bats live in the West, with the densest concentrations found in Texas where they form maternity colonies numbering in the millions. They are found throughout Mexico and most of the western and southern U.S. The largest maternity colonies are formed in limestone caves, abandoned mines, under bridges, and in buildings, but smaller colonies also have been found in hollow trees. It is estimated that 100-million Mexican free-tailed bats come to Central Texas each year to raise their young. Nursing females require large quantities of insects that are high in fat, which they obtain by consuming egg-laden moths.
The 100 million free-tailed bats living in Central Texas caves consume approximately 1,000 tons of insects nightly, a large proportion of which are agricultural pests. Researchers using Doppler weather radar watch emerging bats ascend to altitudes of 1,000-10,000 feet to feed on migrating cotton boll worm moths, army cut-worm moths, and other costly agricultural pests that migrate north from Mexico. These migratory moths hopscotch across the country each year, reaching rich agricultural land as far north as the Canadian border. The cotton boll-worm moth (a.k.a. corn ear-worm moth) alone, costs American farmers a billion dollars annually. Although the ecological and economic impacts of large colonies are most obvious, even small colonies of bats can significantly impact local insect populations. Mexican free- tailed bats also consume enormous quantities of insects over woodlands and forests, likely including many additional pests.
Approximate North American range:
To learn more, read about this bat in our BATS magazine archive:
The Lives of Mexican Free-tailed Bats The Song of the Mexican Free-Tail Bats Aloft: A Study of High-Altitude Feeding Why Are We Losing Our Mexican Free-tailed Bats? How North America's Bats Survive the Winter Bracken Cave: A Priceless Resource The Bats at the Bridge Help for Migratory Bats BCI-Sponsored Education Campaign in Mexico Leads to Cave Protection A Binational Partnership to Protect Mexican Free-tailed Bats Mexico-U.S. Partnership Makes Gains For Migratory Bats Protecting Bats in Our National Parks Habitat for Free-tailed Bats Protected Bats, Bacteria and Biotechnology Backyard Bats
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