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Back From the Frozen: Hundreds of Wild Bats Released After ‘Hypothermic Shock’

Tourists and local residents watch a colony of approximately 1.5 million Mexican free-tailed bats in Austin, Texas, on 10 June, 2005.IndiaParts of the United States had been hit by a ferocious, “once-in-a-century” snowstorm ahead of the Christmas holidays, with some animal species also suffering from the frigid temperatures.Some 700 wild Mexican free-tailed bats that had a close brush with death in inclement weather were released in Houston, Texas, on December 28.The creatures rejoined their colony living under the city’s Waugh Drive bridge after being offered a week of rehabilitation by the Houston Humane Society and Texas Wildlife Rehabilitation Coalition. Crowds thronged the bridge to watch the release.© AFP 2022 / MARK FELIXCrowds watch the release of 700 Mexican free-tailed bats at the Waugh Bridge Bat Colony in Houston, Texas, on December 28, 2022. Crowds watch the release of 700 Mexican free-tailed bats at the Waugh Bridge Bat Colony in Houston, Texas, on December 28, 2022. As the recent snowstorm battered parts of the US over the Christmas weekend, bringing plummeting temperatures along with vast amounts of snow, a slew of bats, which have little body fat and cannot survive in freezing conditions, had fallen to the ground in Texas.To all appearances, they had frozen to death. However, with help from rescuers, many only needed some heat and hydration “to quick start their systems”, according to the Houston Humane Society. Overall, more than 1,500 frozen bats were rettrieved on December 22, with around 115 perishing.According to Mary Warwick, a director at the Houston Humane Society-Texas Wildlife Rehabilitation Coalition, about 60 bats were still being kept in an incubator, with the rest placed in dog kennels, to keep them coo and, accordingly, less hungry.“It’s hard to feed bats in care, because they normally eat in flight, so we would have to force-feed 1,544 bats, which is a lot,” Warwick told reporters.Science & TechBuzz, No Kill: Bats Use ‘Acoustic Mimicry’ to Deter Predators, Scientists Say12 May, 19:27 GMT

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