Help Baby Bats Take Flight!

by Sydney Wildlife
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!
Help Baby Bats Take Flight!

Project Report | Nov 17, 2015
Baby Bat Season again

By Maryanne Large | Sydney Wildlife volunteer

Magda looking beautiful
Magda looking beautiful

It's baby bat season again.

85% of baby flying foxes are born in a 6 week period in spring. Their mothers carry them for the first 5 weeks, until they get too heavy, and if something happens to mum at this time, the babies often come into care.

A common problem is that the mother bat may rest on powerlines, and then, as the more than 1m wingspan unfurls, she may touch 2 lines and get electrocuted. When this happens the mother nearly always dies, but the baby (called a "pup") often survives. They can be surprisingly hardy, sometimes surviving for days after their mum has died.

This little one was recovered after such a long wait that the poor little girl had got maggots, which inspired her name: Magda.

Magda was lucky to be rescued by a dedicated volunteer is now doing very well. She's bottle fed 5 times a day on milk with extra additives, and will gradually be introduced to fruit and nectar. When she is about 12 weeks old, and just learning to fly, she will move into the beautiful creche cage, together with the other baby bats.

Fortunately this year we have not (touch wood) had any heat stress events like the one one from last year, so we hope the numbers of pups coming into care won't increase. Much though we love them, we would prefer them to be with their mums.

But for the unlucky ones who have lost their mums, we now have the best facilities possible to help them recover and rejoin their colony.

Thank you so much for helping bats like Magda have another chance at life.

Just a handful
Just a handful
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Organization Information

Sydney Wildlife

Location: Sydney, NSW - Australia
Website:
Project Leader:
Susan Smith
Sydney , NSW Australia

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