Episode 192: Ghostly Animals

Published: Oct. 5, 2020, 7 a.m.

b'Let\'s start off October with a spooky episode about some ghost animals--real ones, and some ghost stories featuring animals!\\n\\nDon\'t forget to enter our book giveaway! Details here.\\n\\nFurther reading:\\n\\nLolo the Ghost Snake\\n\\nBarn Related Ghost Stories\\n\\nWhat big teef you have, ghost bat:\\n\\n\\n\\nNom nom little ghost bat got some mealworms (also, clearly this rehabilitation worker has THE BEST JOB EVER):\\n\\n\\n\\nGhost snake!\\n\\n\\n\\nThis is where the ghost snake lives. This photo and the one above were both taken by Sara Ruane (find a link to the article and photos in the "further reading" section):\\n\\n\\n\\nThe ghost crab is hard to see against the sand but it can see you:\\n\\n\\n\\nShow transcript:\\n\\nWelcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I\\u2019m your host, Kate Shaw.\\n\\nIt\\u2019s finally October, which means it\\u2019s monster month on the podcast! Let\\u2019s jump right in with an episode about three animals with the word ghost in their name, and some spooky ghost stories that feature animals. (Don\\u2019t worry, they won\\u2019t be too spooky. I don\\u2019t want to scare myself.)\\n\\nFirst up is my personal favorite, the ghost bat. That\\u2019s, like, twice the Halloween fun in one animal! Not only that, it\\u2019s a member of a family of bats called false vampires, and is sometimes called the Australian false vampire bat. I am just, I can\\u2019t, this bat is too perfect and I have died.\\n\\nThe ghost bat lives in parts of northern Australia and is actually pretty big for a microbat. Its wingspan is almost 20 inches wide, or 50 cm. Its color is pale gray, sometimes almost white, while babies are darker gray. It has large, long ears and a nose leaf that helps it echolocate, and it\\u2019s nocturnal like most microbats. While it doesn\\u2019t have a tail, it does have sharp teeth and a strong jaw to help it eat even the bones of small animals.\\n\\nMost microbats eat insects, but the ghost bat prefers vertebrates like frogs, mice, snakes, lizards, birds, even other species of bat. It hunts by dropping down on its prey, most of which live on the ground. It folds its wings around its prey and bites it in the neck to kill it, which makes it even better as a Halloween bat. I love this bat. It eats almost all of the body of its prey, including fur, bones, teeth, and even small feathers in the case of birds. Sometimes it eats its prey immediately, but sometimes it carries it to a small cave to eat, separate from its roosting area, referred to as a midden since the floor is littered with the remains of past meals. If you\\u2019re not familiar with the word midden, it just means a trash heap. Researchers love finding a ghost bat\\u2019s midden because they can find out exactly what animals the bat has eaten lately.\\n\\nFemale ghost bats roost in groups during the late spring to have their babies, usually in caves or abandoned mines. A female gives birth to a single baby, and she carries it around until it\\u2019s big enough to learn how to fly on its own, in about seven weeks. Once it can fly, it accompanies its mother on hunting trips until it\\u2019s fully weaned several months later. A mother bat has two pairs of teats, one pair near her armpits that produces milk for her baby to drink, and one pair near her legs that doesn\\u2019t produce milk. The teats near her legs act as little handholds for her baby to help it keep a good grip on her, especially when it\\u2019s very young.\\n\\nThe ghost bat is vulnerable to many of the usual concerns, including habitat loss and introduced predators, but it also has an unusual issue with an introduced plant and a type of fencing. The ghost bat doesn\\u2019t fly very high most of the time, since it\\u2019s usually hunting for small animals that live on the ground or birds roosting in bushes. As a result, its wings frequently get snagged on the spines of a thorny plant called lantana, and on barbed wire fencing. The spines or barbs tear the wings\\u2019 delicate patagia, often so badly that the bat can\\u2019t fly and starves to death. Since there are only an estimated 8,000 of the bats left in the wild,'