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World’s Largest Bat

The Indian Flying Fox – World’s Largest Bat

Indian Flying Fox – The Indian Flying-Fox may be the world’s largest bat, popularly known as Greater Indian Fruit Bat or Giant Golden-Crowned Flying Fox. Greater Indian Fruit bat lives in tropical forests and swamps in India.

World’s Largest Bat, The Indian flying fox, Greater Indian Fruit Bat, Giant Golden-Crowned Flying Fox

Indian Flying Fox licking its claw


Anatomy

The flying-fox is so called due to its unique, fox like appearance. Usually The Indian flying-fox is in reddish-brown coat, characteristically long snout as well as large eyes. And the greater Indian fruit bat resembles a little fox with wings.

World’s Largest Bat, The Indian flying fox, Greater Indian Fruit Bat, Giant Golden-Crowned Flying Fox

Indian Flying Fox tasting honey from Banana Flower


The greater Indian fruit bat have leathery wing and the habit of sleeping in an upside down position. The animal exhibits small ears. Instead of using echolocation, this flying fox perceives its environment through well-developed senses of vision and smell and it helping the animal to detect food.

Like all other bats, the Indian flying-fox has claws, found on the second finger of each wing and used for grasping fruits and other objects.

The Indian Flying Fox – Food and Habitat

The Indian flying foxes are usually frugivorous or nectarivorous. They eat fruits or lick nectar from flowers. The Indian flying foxes are lick nectar from banana flowers.

At dusk, these bats forage for ripe fruit. While ingesting fruit, these bats expel waste that pollinates and disperse seeds.

World’s Largest Bat, The Indian flying fox, Greater Indian Fruit Bat, Giant Golden-Crowned Flying Fox

Indian Flying Fox – A clear view of big eyes and small ears


Habitat

The Indian flying foxes are highly social creatures, forming large roosts of several hundred animals and usually occupies one tree. These bats live in a ‘vertical’, male-dominated hierarchy system, where higher-ranked individuals occupy higher spots of the tree, while lower-ranked individuals remain on lower spots.

The Indian-flying-foxes spend their nighttime hours looking for food, feeding, digesting their meal, resting as well as socializing and moving around the tree. In order to maintain suitable body temperature, these bats fan themselves with their wings.


DOWNLOAD A HIGH QUALITY PHOTO OF INDIAN FLYING FOX

GREATER INDIAN FRUIT BAT – PHOTO 01

GREATER INDIAN FRUIT BAT – PHOTO 02

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