Bats (order Chiroptera ) are winged ; the only mammals capable of true and sustained Bat flight. Bats are more agile in flight than most , flying with their long spread-out digits covered with a thin membrane or patagium. The smallest bat, and one of the smallest extant mammals, is Kitti's hog-nosed bat, which is in length, across the forearm and in mass. The largest bats are the flying foxes, with the giant golden-crowned flying fox ( Acerodon jubatus) reaching a weight of and having a wingspan of .
The second largest order of mammals after , bats account for about 20% of all classified mammal species worldwide, with at least 1,500 known species. These were traditionally divided into two suborders: the largely fruit-eating and the echolocating . But more recent evidence has supported dividing the order into Yinpterochiroptera and Yangochiroptera, with megabats as members of the former along with several species of microbats. Many bats are , and most of the rest are (fruit-eaters) or (nectar-eaters). A few species feed on animals other than insects; for example, the are Hematophagy (feeding on blood). Most bats are nocturnal, and many roost in caves or other refuges; it is uncertain whether bats have these behaviours to escape . Bats are distributed globally in almost all regions. They are important in their ecosystems for pollinating flowers and dispersing seeds as well as controlling insect populations.
Bats provide humans with some direct benefits, at the cost of some disadvantages. Bat dung has been mined as guano from caves and used as fertiliser. Bats consume insect pests, reducing the need for and other insect management measures. Bats are sometimes numerous enough and close enough to human settlements to serve as tourist attractions, and they are used as food in Africa, Asia, the Pacific and the Caribbean. Due to their physiology, bats are one type of animal that acts as a natural reservoir of many , such as rabies, and since they are highly mobile, social, and long-lived, they can readily spread disease among themselves. If humans interact with bats, these traits become potentially dangerous to humans.
Depending on the culture, bats may be symbolically associated with positive traits, such as protection from certain diseases or risks, rebirth, or long life, but in the West, bats are popularly associated with darkness, malevolence, witchcraft, , and death.
Bats were formerly grouped in the superorder Archonta, along with the (Scandentia), (Dermoptera), and primates. Modern genetic evidence now places bats in the superorder Laurasiatheria, with its sister taxon as Ferungulata, which includes , , odd-toed ungulates, and even-toed ungulates. One study places Chiroptera as a sister taxon to odd-toed ungulates (Perissodactyla).
The flying primate hypothesis proposed that when adaptations to flight are removed, megabats are allied to primates and by anatomical features not shared with microbats, and thus flight evolved twice in mammals. Genetic studies have strongly supported the monophyly of all bats and the single origin of mammal flight.
The 2003 discovery of an early fossil bat from the 52-million-year-old Green River Formation, Onychonycteris, indicates that flight evolved before echolocative abilities. Unlike modern bats, Onychonycteris had claws on all five of its fingers. It also had longer hind legs and shorter forearms, possible adaptations for climbing. This palm-sized bat had short, broad wings, suggesting that it could not fly as fast or as far as later bat species. Instead of flapping its wings continuously while flying, Onychonycteris probably switched between flaps and glides in the air. Hence flight in bats likely developed from gliding and in arboreal locomotors, rather than terrestrial runners. This model of flight development, commonly known as the "trees-down" theory, holds that bats first flew by taking advantage of height and gravity to drop down on to prey, rather than running fast enough for a ground-level take-off.
The molecular phylogeny was controversial, as it pointed to microbats paraphyly, which implied that some seemingly unlikely transformations occurred. The first is that laryngeal echolocation evolved twice in bats, once in Yangochiroptera and once in the rhinolophoids. The second is that laryngeal echolocation had a single origin in Chiroptera, was lost in the family Pteropodidae (all megabats), and later evolved as a system of tongue-clicking in the genus Rousettus. Analyses of the sequence of the vocalisation gene FoxP2 were inconclusive on whether laryngeal echolocation was lost in the pteropodids or gained in the echolocating lineages. Echolocation probably first derived in bats from communicative calls. The Eocene bats Icaronycteris (52 million years ago) and Palaeochiropteryx had cranial adaptations suggesting an ability to produce ultrasound. This may have been used at first mainly to forage on the ground for insects and map out their surroundings in their gliding phase or for communicative purposes. After the adaptation of flight was established, it may have been refined to target flying prey. A 2008 analysis of the hearing gene Prestin seems to favour the idea that echolocation developed independently at least twice, rather than being lost secondarily in the pteropodids, but ontogeny analysis of the cochlea supports that laryngeal echolocation evolved only once.
Below is a table chart following the bat classification of families recognised by various authors of the ninth volume of Handbook of the Mammals of the World published in 2019:
The flexible finger bones of bats have a flattened cross-section and become less mineralised towards the tips. The elongation of bat digits, a key feature required for wing development, is due to the upregulation of bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs). During embryo, the gene controlling BMP signalling, BMP-2, is subjected to increased expression in bat forelimbsresulting in the extension of the manual digits. This crucial genetic alteration helps create the specialised limbs required for powered flight. The relative proportion of extant bat forelimb digits compared with those of Eocene fossil bats have no significant differences, suggesting that bat wing morphology has been conserved for over fifty million years. During flight, the bones undergo bending and shear stress stress; the former being less than in terrestrial mammals, and the latter being greater. The wing bones of bats are less resistant to breaking than those of birds.
As in other mammals, and unlike in birds, the radius is the main component of the forearm. Bats have five elongated digits, which all radiate around the wrist. The thumb points forward and supports the leading edge of the wing, and the other digits support the tension held in the wing membrane. The second and third digits go along the wingtip, allowing the wing to be pulled forward against aerodynamic drag without having to be thick, as in pterosaur wings. The fourth and fifth digits go from the wrist to the trailing edge and repel the bending force caused by air pushing up against the stiff membrane. The knees point upwards and outwards during flight due to the attachment of the femurs, while the ankle joint can bend the trailing edge downwards.
Due to their flexible joints, bats are more manoeuvrable and more dexterous than gliding mammals, and their thin, articulated wings allow them to manoeuvre more accurately than birds and fly with more lift and less drag. By folding the wings in toward their bodies on the upstroke, they save 35 percent energy during flight. Flight muscles used for the upstroke are located on the back, while those for the downstroke are at the chest. This is in contrast to birds, where both muscle types are at the chest. Nectar- and pollen-eating bats can hover in a similar way to . The sharp leading edges of the wings can create vortex, which provide Vortex lift. The vortex may be stabilised by the animal changing its wing curvature.
The patagium is the wing membrane, which reaches from the arm and finger bones to the side of the body and the hindlimbs. The extent to which the tail of a bat is attached to a patagium can vary by species, with some having completely free tails or even no tails. For bat embryos, only the hindfeet experience apoptosis (programmed cell death), while the forefeet retain webbing between the fingers that become the wing membranes. These structures include connective tissue, , nerves, muscles, and blood vessels. The muscles keep the membrane taut as the animal flies.
While the skin on the body of the bat is covered in hair and sweat glands with an epidermis, a dermis, and a fatty subcutaneous layer, the patagium is an extremely thin double layer of epidermis separated by a connective tissue centre rich with collagen and . The surface of the wings is equipped with touch-sensitive receptors on small bumps called . Each bump has a tiny hair in the centre, allowing the bat to detect and adapt to changing airflow; the primary use is to judge the most efficient speed at which to fly, and possibly also to avoid stalls. Insectivorous bats may also use tactile hairs when manoeuvring to capture flying insects. While delicate, the membranes can heal quickly and regrow when torn.
Photoluminescence has been reported in at least six North American species based on 60 museum specimens. The wings, uropatagium (around the tail), and hind limbs of these bats glowed green when exposed to UV light. The explanation for this is uncertain, and some have suggested the phenomenon is an artefact of the techniques used to dry specimens for museum storage.
Bats are more awkward when crawling on the ground, though a few species, such as the New Zealand lesser short-tailed bat ( Mystacina tuberculata) and the common vampire bat ( Desmodus rotundus), are quite agile. These species move their limbs one after the other, but vampire bats accelerate by bounding, the folded-up wings being used to propel them forward. Vampire bats likely evolved these gaits to stalk their hosts, while short-tailed bats took to the ground due to a lack of competition from other mammals. Terrestrial locomotion does not appear to affect their ability to fly.
The Digestion of bats varies depending on the species of bat and its diet. Digestion is relatively quick to meet the energy demands of flight. Insectivorous bats may have certain to better process insects, such as chitinase to break down their chitin exoskeleton. Vampire bats, probably due to their diet of blood, are unique among vertebrates in that they do not have the enzyme maltase, which breaks down malt sugar, in their intestinal tract. Nectivorous and frugivorous bats have more maltase and sucrase enzymes than insectivores, to cope with the higher sugar contents of their diet.
The adaptations of the kidneys of bats vary with their diets. Carnivorous and vampire bats consume large amounts of protein and can output concentrated urine; their kidneys have a thin cortex and long . Frugivorous bats lack that ability and have kidneys adapted for electrolyte retention due to their low-electrolyte diet; their kidneys accordingly have a thick cortex and very short conical papillae. Flying gives bats relatively high metabolism, which increases respiratory water loss. known as cerebrosides retain water in cold temperatures but allow for evaporation through the skin in hot temperatures to cool them. Water helps maintain the ionic balance in their blood, thermoregulation system and urinary and waste system. They are also susceptible to blood urea poisoning if they do not receive enough fluid.
The structure of the uterine system in female bats can vary by species, with some having two while others have a single mainline chamber.
In low-duty cycle echolocation, bats can separate their calls and returning echoes by time. They have to time their short calls to finish before echoes return. In high-duty cycle echolocation, bats emit a continuous call and separate pulse and echo in frequency using the Doppler effect of their motion in flight. The shift of the returning echoes yields information relating to the motion and location of the bat's prey. These bats must deal with changes in the Doppler shift due to changes in their flight speed. They have adapted to change their pulse emission frequency in relation to their flight speed so echoes still return in the optimal hearing range.
In addition to echolocating prey, bat ears are sensitive to sounds made by their prey, such as the fluttering of moth wings. The complex geometry of ridges on the inner surface of bat ears helps to sharply focus echolocation signals and to passively listen for any other sound produced by the prey. These ridges can be regarded as the acoustic equivalent of a Fresnel lens. Bats can estimate the elevation of their target using the interference patterns from the echoes reflecting from the tragus, a flap of skin in the external ear.
By repeated scanning, bats can mentally construct an accurate image of the environment in which they are moving and of their prey. Many species of moth have exploited this, such as many Arctiinae, which produce aposematic ultrasound signals to warn bats that they are chemically protected and therefore distasteful. Some tiger moths can produce signals to jam bat echolocation. In some moth species, the tympanal organ hearing organ causes the insect to move in random evasive manoeuvres when detecting a bat call.
Bats may avoid flying during the day to prevent overheating in the sun, since they would absorb sun radiation via their dark wing membranes. Bats may not be able to release heat if the ambient temperature is too high; they use saliva to cool themselves in extreme conditions. Among megabats, the flying fox Pteropus hypomelanus uses saliva and wing-fanning to cool itself while roosting during the hottest part of the day. Among microbats, the Yuma myotis ( Myotis yumanensis), the Mexican free-tailed bat ( Tadarida brasiliensis), and the pallid bat ( Antrozous pallidus) cope with temperatures up to by panting, salivating, and licking their fur to promote evaporative cooling; this is sufficient to release twice their metabolic heat production.
During torpor, bats drop their body temperature to , while their energy usage diminishes by 50 to 99%. Tropical bats may use it to reduce the chance of being caught by a predator during foraging. Megabats were generally believed to be homoeothermic, but three species of small megabats, with a mass of about , have been known to use torpor: the common blossom bat ( Syconycteris australis), the long-tongued nectar bat ( Macroglossus minimus), and the eastern tube-nosed bat ( Nyctimene robinsoni). Torpid states last longer in the summer for megabats than in the winter.
During hibernation, bats enter a torpid state and decrease their body temperature for 99.6% of their hibernation period; even during periods of arousal, when their body temperature returns to normal, they sometimes enter a shallow torpid state, known as "heterothermic arousal". Some bats become dormant during higher temperatures to keep cool in the summer months (aestivation).
Heterothermic bats during long migrations may fly at night and go into a torpid state roosting in the daytime. Unlike migratory birds, which fly during the day and feed during the night, nocturnal bats have a conflict between travelling and eating. The energy saved reduces their food requirements and also decreases the duration of migration, which may prevent them from spending too much time in unfamiliar places and decrease predation. In some species, pregnant individuals use a more moderate state of torpor to maintain foetal development, while still saving energy.
In temperate areas, some bats migrate to winter hibernation dens, usually caves and mines, where they pass into torpor during the cold weather, never waking and relying on their stored fat. Similarly, tropical bats go through aestivation during periods of prolonged heat and dryness. Bats rarely fly in rain, possibly because being wet costs them more energy and raindrops interfere with their echolocation. They do appear to surf storm fronts when travelling to give birth in warmer temperatures.
Bats as a group appear to be losing vitamin C synthesis. Such a loss was recorded in 34 bat species from six major families, both insect- and fruit-eating, with the cause being a single mutation inherited from a common ancestor. Vitamin C synthesis has been recorded in at least two species of bat, Leschenault's rousette ( Rousettus leschenaultii) and the great roundleaf bat ( Hipposideros armiger).
Nectar-eating bats have acquired specialised adaptations. These bats possess long muzzles and long, extensible tongues covered in fine bristles that aid them in feeding on particular flowers and plants. The tube-lipped nectar bat ( Anoura fistulata) has a proportionally longer tongue than any mammal and is the only species capable of reaching deep into the flowers of Centropogon nigri. When the tongue retracts, it is pulled inside the rib cage. Because of these features, nectar-feeding bats cannot easily turn to other food sources in times of scarcity, making them more at risk of extinction than other species. Nectar feeding also aids a variety of plants, since these bats serve as , as pollen attaches to their fur while they feed. Around 500 species of flowering plant rely on bat pollination and thus tend to open their flowers at night. Many rainforest and Mediterranean plants depend on bat pollination.
Bats are natural reservoirs for a large number of zoonosis , including rabies, endemic in many bat populations;
Bats seem to be highly resistant to many of the pathogens they carry, suggesting a degree of adaptation to their immune systems. Their interactions with livestock and pets, including predation by vampire bats, compound the risk of zoonotic transmission. Bats have been connected to the emergence of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in China, since they serve as natural hosts for , several from a cave in Yunnan, one of which developed into the SARS virus. However, there is no evidence that bats cause or spread COVID-19.
Several species have a fission-fusion social structure, where large numbers of bats congregate in one roosting area, along with the breaking up and mixing of subgroups. Within these societies, long-term relationships form despite the fluidity of grouping. Some of these relationships consist of related females and their dependent offspring. Food sharing and mutual grooming are known to occur in species like the common vampire bat ( Desmodus rotundus).
In a study on captive Egyptian fruit bats, 70% of the directed calls could be identified by the researchers as to which individual bat made it, and 60% could occur in four contexts: fights over food, quarrelling for a sleeping position, female aggression toward amorous males, and arguing between perched neighbours. The animals made slightly different sounds when communicating with different individual bats, especially those of the opposite sex. In the highly sexually dimorphic hammer-headed bat ( Hypsignathus monstrosus), males display to females with a "deep, resonating, monotonous call". Bats in flight make vocal signals for traffic control. Greater bulldog bats honk when on a collision course with each other.
Bats also communicate by other means. Male little yellow-shouldered bats ( Sturnira lilium) use a spicy odour secreted from their shoulder glands during the breeding season, retained and spread by specialised hairs. These hairs exist in other species, which are noticeable as collars around the necks in some Old World megabat males. Male greater sac-winged bats ( Saccopteryx bilineata) have sacs in their wings in which they mix body secretions like saliva and urine to create a perfume that they sprinkle on roost sites, a behaviour known as "salting". The bats may sing while salting.
Temperate-living bats typically mate during late summer and autumn, while tropical bats may mate multiple times a year. In hibernating species, males will copulate with females in torpor. Female bats use a variety of strategies to control the timing of pregnancy and the birth of young, to make delivery coincide with maximum food availability and other ecological factors. Females of some species have delayed fertilisation, in which sperm is stored in the reproductive tract for several months after mating. Mating occurs in late summer to early autumn, but fertilisation is delayed until the following late winter to early spring. Other species exhibit delayed implantation, in which the egg is fertilised after mating but does not experience all its cell divisions until external conditions become favourable. In another strategy, fertilisation and implantation both occur, but development of the foetus is delayed until good conditions prevail. During the delayed development, the mother keeps the fertilised egg alive with nutrients. This process can go on for a long period because of the advanced gas exchange system.
Gestation in bats ranges from around 40 days to eight months, correlating with the size of the species. In most bat species, females carry and give birth to a single pup per litter. A newborn bat pup can be up to 40 percent of the mother's weight, and the pelvic girdle of the female can expand during birth as the two halves are connected by a flexible ligament. Females typically give birth upright or horizontally, using gravity to make the process easier. The young emerges rear-first, possibly to prevent the wings from becoming tangled, and the female holds it in her wing and tail membranes. In many species, females give birth and raise their young in maternity colonies and may assist each other in birthing.
Most of the care for a young bat comes from the mother, though in monogamous species, the father plays a role. Allo-suckling, where a female suckles another mother's young, occurs in several species. This may serve to increase colony size in species where females breed in their birth colonies. Young bats can fly after they develop their adult body dimensions and forelimb length. For the little brown bat, this occurs when they are eighteen days old. Weaning of young for most species takes place in under 80 days. The common vampire bat nurses its offspring beyond that, and young vampire bats achieve independence later in life than other species. This is probably due to the species's blood-based diet, as the female may not be able to feed on a nightly basis.
Many people put up bat houses to attract bats. The 1991 University of Florida bat house is the largest occupied artificial roost in the world, with around 450,000–500,000 residents. In Britain, thick-walled and partly underground World War II pillboxes have been converted to make roosts for bats, and purpose-built 'bat bridges' are occasionally built to mitigate damage to habitat from roads or other developments. are sometimes installed to limit human entry into caves with sensitive or endangered bat species. The gates are designed not to limit the airflow and thus to maintain the cave's micro-ecosystem. In the United States, 35 of the 47 bat species roost on human-made structures, while 14 of them use bat houses.
There is evidence that suggests that might create sufficient barotrauma (pressure damage) to kill bats. Bats have typical mammalian lungs, which are thought to be more sensitive to sudden air pressure changes than Avian lungs, making them more liable to fatal rupture." Bats take a battering at wind farms", New Scientist, 12 May 2007 Bats may approach turbines to roost on them, increasing the death rate. Ultrasonic signals may help to deter bats from approaching wind farms, thus reducing deaths. The diagnosis and contribution of barotrauma to bat deaths near wind turbine blades have been disputed by other research comparing dead bats found near wind turbines with bats killed by impact with buildings in areas with no turbines.
The effects of climate change on bats are debated; a 2022 literature review concluded that, "Several biological and ecological traits of bats may make them sensitive to climate change, yet there is surprisingly little evidence on how these mammals respond to this anthropogenic environmental pressure." A 2025 study of European species found that bat populations may be shifting their ranges further north. Specifically, range suitability declined markedly in southern Europe while increasing at higher northern latitudes.
More positive depictions of bats exist in some cultures. In China, bats have been associated with happiness, joy and good fortune and symbolise the "Wufu": longevity, riches, health, love of virtue and a peaceful passing away. The bat is sacred in Tonga and is often considered the physical manifestation of a separable soul. Mayan people associated bats with the gateway to the realm of the gods since they live in caves. In the Zapotec civilisation, the bat god presided over corn and fertility.
The Weird Sisters in Shakespeare's Macbeth used the fur of a bat in their brew. In Western culture, the bat is often a symbol of the night and its foreboding nature. The bat is a primary animal associated with fictional characters of the night, both villainous , such as Count Dracula and, before him, Varney the Vampire, and heroes, such as the DC Comics character Batman.
The bat is sometimes used as a heraldic symbol in many European countries, including France, Belgium, Germany, Spain and the UK. They have also been used as symbols in the militaries of the UK, US and Israel. Three US states have an official state bat. Texas and Oklahoma are represented by the Mexican free-tailed bat, while Virginia is represented by the Virginia big-eared bat ( Corynorhinus townsendii virginianus).
Insectivorous bats in particular are especially helpful to farmers, as they control populations of agricultural pests and reduce the need to use pesticides. It has been estimated that bats save the agricultural industry of the United States anywhere from USD3.7billion to $53billion per year in pesticides and damage to crops. This also prevents the overuse of pesticides, which can pollute the surrounding environment and may lead to resistance in future generations of insects. Some bats are predators of mosquitoes, suppressing the transmission of mosquito-borne diseases. Bats have also been tourist attractions, including the Congress Avenue Bridge in Austin, Texas, where over a million Mexican free-tailed bats roost.
Co-evolutionary evidence
Inner systematics
Classification
Chiroptera Blumenbach, 1779 Yinpterochiroptera Springer, Teeling, Madsen, Stanhope & Jong, 2001 Pteropodidae J. E. Gray, 1821 Pteropodidae J. E. Gray, 1821 Megabat 191 Rhinolophoidea J. E. Gray, 1825 Rhinopomatidae Bonaparte, 1838 6 Craseonycteridae Hill, 1974 Hog-nosed bat 1 Megadermatidae H. Allen, 1864 Megadermatidae 6 Rhinonycteridae J. E. Gray, 1866 Rhinonycteridae 9 Hipposideridae Lydekker, 1891 Hipposideridae 88 Rhinolophidae J. E. Gray, 1825 109 Yangochiroptera Koopman, 1984 Emballonuroidea Gervais in de Castelnau, 1855 Nycteridae Van der Hoeven, 1855 Nycteris 15 Emballonuridae Gervais in de Castelnau, 1855 Emballonuridae 54 Noctilionoidea J. E. Gray, 1821 Myzopodidae Thomas, 1904 Madagascar and western sucker-footed bats 2 Mystacinidae Dobson, 1875 Mystacinidae 2 Thyropteridae Miller, 1907 Thyroptera 5 Furipteridae J. E. Gray, 1866 Smoky bat and thumbless bat 2 Noctilionidae J. E. Gray, 1821 2 Mormoopidae Saussure, 1860 Ghost-faced bat, naked-backed and Mormoops 18 Phyllostomidae J. E. Gray, 1825 Leaf-nosed bat 217 Vespertilionoidea J. E. Gray, 1821 Natalidae J. E. Gray, 1825 Natalidae 10 Molossidae Gervais in de Castelnau, 1855 126 Miniopteridae Dobson, 1875 Miniopterus 38 Cistugidae Lack et al., 2010 Cistugo 2 Vespertilionidae J. E. Gray, 1821 Vespertilionidae 496
Anatomy and physiology
Skull and dentition
Wings, skin, and flight
Roosting and gaits
Internal systems
Senses
Echolocation and hearing
Vision
Smell
Magnetoreception and infrared sensing
Thermoregulation
Size
Ecology
Food and feeding
Insects and invertebrates
Plant material
Vertebrates
Blood
Predators, parasites, and diseases
Behaviour and life history
Social structure
Communication
Reproduction and life cycle
Life expectancy
Conservation
Interactions with humans
Cultural significance
Uses and benefits
See also
Explanatory notes
Sources
External links
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