Bat Information
Straw-colored fruit bat photographs
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The straw-colored fruit bat (Eidolon helvum)

The straw-colored fruit bat is found in Africa, and is the most widely distributed of the African fruit bats. Its body is about 215 mm, and it's wingspan can reach 762 mm. Adults can weigh 230-350 grams! The coloration is yellowish brown or brownish above and tawny olive below. Their wings are long and narrow and are adapted to flying long distances. The wings are also used in climbing about branches in the roosts.

This bat inhabits forest and savannas and is found at elevations of up to 2,000 meters. It is a very social bat and prefers to roost in tall trees by day but has also seen found in lofts and in caves. During daytime it is often noisy and restless and even flies about from place to place. At night groups fly out of the roosts in search of ripe fruit. The large roosts are seldom closer than 60 km to one another. The roosts the bats use are within easy reach of forests or fruit plantations. Juice of various fruits are the preferred food, though this bat also feeds on the blossoms and perhaps young shoots of the silk-cotton tree.

The bats will eat directly into the fruit of palm trees, and has the unusual habit of chewing into the soft wood, probably to get moisture. The straw-colored fruit bats occur in enormous colonies of 100,00 to 1,000,000 individuals of both sexes. Female bats have one young per year, and a newborn can weigh 50 grams. The known longevity record for straw-colored fruit bats is 21 years and 10 months.

In some areas these bats are hunted and eaten by humans, but in other areas they are protected. Many farmers in Africa think of the bats as a threat to the introduced pine plantations, because the bats gnaw the bark. However, these bats do not cause very much harm to the trees and should not be harmed.

Straw-colored fruit bat photographs

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