Sunday, November 5, 2023

Twinkle, twinkle, little bat! ©

 

 


Bats!  Batty bats!  Flappity flap on Halloween Night!  Spooky! Scary!  Misunderstood!

 

That’s right bats aren’t scary, they are just misunderstood.

 

Everyone thinks of bats and immediately thinks of vampires, rabies, and death, and since it is Halloween let’s talk vampires, rabies, and death!



Vampires!

 

So, why is that vampires and bats go together like Oreos and milk? 

 

Is it because Count Orlok, the Nosferatu vampire, bears a striking resemblance to the common vampire bat, desmodus rotundus, particularly around the ears and fangs?  Maybe it is because bats look like winged mice?  In fact, the German word for bat, “fleidermaus”, means “flying mouse”!  Maybe it is because, like vampires and the undead, most bats only come out at night?  But mostly we must blame Bram Stroker, who in the 1890’s, while researching Dracula, came upon an exaggerated story in a New York newspaper about vampire bats of the South American pampas, who had drained a horse of blood! 

 


 

The first Spanish explorers of Central and South America discovered three species of small, mouse -sized bats, that feed only on blood. 



These three species of “true” vampire bats2 are the only bats of all the 1,300 bat species that drink blood, and they don’t suck it from their victims, who are usually large, hoofed mammals.  They normally land on the ground near their intended victim, often while they are sleeping.  Then the bat climbs the animal’s body to find the right place to bite.  


To find the best spot to bite, vampire bats use specialized heat-sensing “pit organs” near their noses, to detect small differences in body temperature from blood flowing near the surface of their victim’s skin.  And once the spot is chosen, the bat uses its razor sharp, blade-like incisors to make a small about 1/8 inch (3-5 mm) incision, wide and deep, in the skin of its victim.  Because the bat’s teeth are so sharp, the animal seldom knows it has been bitten, and anti-coagulants and pain killers in the bat’s saliva help to keep victims unaware that they have been bitten and are being fed upon.  


But vampire bats, unlike mythical vampires, do not suck blood, instead they lap up the blood like a cat, with a specialized tongue that has two sideways grooves on the bottom that expand and contract as the bat feeds, helping to move the blood into their mouth.  The anticlotting proteins in the bat’s saliva keep the blood flowing until the bat has drunk its fill, which might take about 20 minutes.  Vampire bats need about 2 tablespoons (20 grams) of blood per day, and they cannot survive more than two or three days without a meal.


But the most likely reason bats have been associated with the undead for millennia, is because they can spread rabies!

 

Rabies and Death

 


All bats can carry rabies.  However, the common vampire bat is one of the few species of bats that is considered an agricultural pest.  This is because of its feeding on domestic livestock and the subsequent spreading of rabies.  Losses to the cattle industry from to rabies in South America amounts to many millions of dollars every year.5

 

Rabies is a very dangerous zoonotic disease, affecting all mammals, which kills up to 70,000 people per year worldwide3.  It is caused by the virus, rabies lyssavirus, which after entering the body through a cut, bite or other break in the skin, travels along the nervous system until it reaches and infects the brain, causing encephalitis, or swelling, and then death.  The virus travels at an estimated 1/8 inch (3 mm) an hour and it may take anywhere from ten to more than sixty days to reach the brain, depending on your size and where you are bitten.  Once it reaches your brain, it is fatal, with only three people in recorded history having survived, and all of those received aggressive immunotherapy and medical treatment, without this aggressive treatment no one survives.  However, even with this type of treatment, two of the three suffered from severe neurological damage4.  The good news, if that can be said of rabies, is that rabies is 100% treatable, before the virus reaches the brain and you no longer need twenty  shots in the abdomen, only six shots in the upper arm. 

 


Fun Bat Facts...

 

·       Bats are found on every continent, except Antarctica.

·       Bats can live almost anywhere, except polar regions and deserts.

·       A young bat can eat 600 mosquitos in an hour.

·       Most bat species hibernate in caves in the winter and roost in tree cavities during the summer.

·       Bat echolocation calls are very high pitched, up to 110kHz, and humans can typically only hear up to 20 kHz.

·       Over 500 species of plants, including mango, banana, cocoa, and guava, are pollinated by plants.

 

Don’t forget to come back next week and read “What Can You Do With a 10 by 10 Tarp ©”, where we will talk about the different kind of shelters you can build with a 10 by 10 foot (3 by 3 m) tarp.

 


I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE.  Don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE, and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube.  If you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.  I announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.

 

That is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!

 

 

Notes

 

1 “Which Came First, The Bat Or The Vampire” by

 

2 The common vampire bat, desmodus rotundus, the white winged vampire bat, diaemus youngi, and the hairy-legged vampire bat, dipylla ecaudata.

 

From “Which Came First, The Bat Or The Vampire” by Delta Pest Control

 

3 “Rabies”, by Ron Koury and Steven J. Warrington

 

4 “Bats and Rabies” by Bryan Yeaton

 

5 “Vampire Bats – The Good, the Bad, and the Amazing”, by Texas Tech University

 

Sources

 

Delta Pest Control; “Which Came First, The Bat Or The Vampire?”, © 2023 Delta Pest Control, https://www.deltapestcontrolservice.com/why-are-bats-and-vampires-so-closely-associated, accessed October 29, 2023

 

Galetti, Mauro; Pedrosa, Felipe; and Keuroghlian, Alexine; “Liquid lunch – vampire bats feed on invasive feral pigs and other ungulates”, November 2016, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 14(9), pages 505-506 https://www.researchgate.net/publication/309591571_Liquid_lunch_-_vampire_bats_feed_on_invasive_feral_pigs_and_other_ungulates, accessed November 4, 2023

 

Hgregory, “Bats of Missouri”, December 31, 2019, https://sites.wustl.edu/monh/bats-of-missouri/, accessed October 29, 2023

 

Koury, Ron and Warrington, Steven J.; “Rabies”, National Library of Medicine, October 31, 2022, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK448076/, accessed November 4, 2023

 

Lang, Andrew; The Red Book of Animal Stories, [Longmans, Green & Co., London, 1899], https://ia800205.us.archive.org/25/items/redbookofanimals00languoft/redbookofanimals00languoft.pdf, accessed October 29, 2023

 

Morgan, Clint N.; Ammerman, Loren K.; Demere, Krysta; and Maudlin, Matthew R.; Field Identification Key and Guide for Bats of the United States of America, Jan 2019, https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-general-anatomy-of-a-bat_fig1_330545977, accessed November 4, 2023

 

Texas Tech University; “Vampire Bats – The Good, the Bad, and the Amazing”, May 2014 - January 2015, https://www.depts.ttu.edu/nsrl/get-involved/downloads/vampire-bat-exhibit.pdf, accessed November 4, 2023

 

Wikimedia, “Desmodus rotundus murinus 18667411”, by Juan Cruzado Cortés, March 5, 2018, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Desmodus_rotundus_murinus_18667411.jpg, accessed October 29, 2023

 

Wikimedia; Illustration for The red book of animal stories, 1899, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_red_animal_story_book_-_plate_facing_page_196.png, accessed October 29, 2023

 

Wikimedia, “Le Vampire”, by R. de Moraine, Les tribunaux secrets, 1864, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Moraine_le_vampire.jpg, accessed October 29, 2023

 

Wikimedia; “Geographical distribution of common vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus)”, from Mammals of Mexico, 2014, edited by Gerardo Ceballos, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Desmodus_rotundus_map.svg, accessed November 4, 2023

 

Yeaton, Bryan; “Bats and Rabies (But mostly bats)”, Wilderness Medicine Newsletter, May/June 1997, Vol. 8, No. 3, page 19 to 21, https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED415056.pdf, accessed October 29, 2023

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