this post was submitted on 23 Nov 2024
466 points (99.4% liked)

Bats

1395 readers
43 users here now

Bats are cool

Bats are the only true flying mammals. There are over 1,400 species of bats, and they can be found on nearly every part of the planet. Not only are they cute, they are also important...

Studying how bats use echolocation has helped scientists develop navigational aids for the blind. Without bats’ pollination, seed dispersal, and pest control we wouldn’t have bananas, avocados, mangoes, agave, or cacao… that’s right, bats bring us tequila and chocolate!

Found a bat in need of help?

Celebrate bats with us!

Our community's mascot is Baxter. Baxter is an Egyptian fruit bat that was cruelly kept alone and confined to a small cage for 12 years before being rescued by a bat sanctuary. You can read the full story by clicking on his name.

Our rules for posting and commenting, besides the rules defined here for lemmy.world, are as follows:

Everyone should feel welcome here. Hateful or bigoted language will not be tolerated.

Don’t post anything a fruit bat would not approve of.

Please don't hate on bats in this community (this includes all of your edgy covid humor).

Bats don’t like spam.

Related Communities

Community Feedback and Moderation

For inquiry on becoming a moderator of this community, please send a message to the current moderators. Any feedback on the community should also be sent to the moderators.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] ickplant 95 points 3 weeks ago (16 children)

“Despite their terrifying wingspan of over five feet, these bats are actually harmless to humans and feed exclusively on fruit.”

[–] sartalon 31 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (9 children)

Not harmless when you are flying an H-60, on goggles, at night over Jolo island.

Those guys do not show up very well at all on goggles. One second you are cruising over the canopy, the next you are looking for an emergency landing, because you just flew through a bunch, hit one, and are afraid you might have sucked him down an engine.

Then you are crawling around dense, unfamiliar undergrowth, trying to inspect the aircraft, while it is still pulling power, (because the ground isn't level and we can't trust it will support our weight). Praying to God the blood smear goes down and not in.

There was blood, no gore, and it was clear it hit the windscreen, but nothing to indicate anything went in the engine. Gauges were clean, so pilots pulled the seat cushions out of their butts, I said a prayer for the poor sky fox, and we went home.

In retrospect we were pretty safe. The H-60 engines are pretty good about not pulling in stuff. They don't have the kind of suction the fixed wing jets do, big fan on top does a good job keeping the air clear too. Those bats are big. That worked in our favor.

We generally put a little more cushion between us and the canopy after that, but there were some elements that loved to take potshots at us, so it was not an easy balance to make.

Still feel bad about that poor bat.

Edit: I have to be honest and say I can't really confirm it was even one of these really big ones, since I know there are more than one species of nocturnal fruit bats in the southern Philippines. The sentiment still applies though.

[–] TheDoozer 5 points 3 weeks ago

I've dealt with eagles plenty while on 60s, and that was bad enough. I can't imagine dealing with bats of the same size at night.

The 60 is a beast, though.

load more comments (8 replies)
load more comments (14 replies)