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         Bats:     more books (103)
  1. Casey at the Bat: A Ballad of the Republic Sung in the Year 1888 (Caldecott Honor Book) by Ernest L. Thayer, 2000-10-01
  2. Bats (Scholastic Reader Level 1) by Lily Wood, 2010-09-01
  3. The Truth about Bats (The Magic School Bus Chapter Book, No. 1) by Eva Moore, 2000-01-01
  4. Beautiful Bats by Linda Glaser, 1998-04-01
  5. The Bat Scientists (Scientists in the Field) (Scientists in the Field Series) by Mary Kay Carson, 2010-09-06
  6. Little Lost Bat by Sandra Markle, 2009-02-01
  7. Casey at the Bat by Ernest L. Thayer, Joe Torre, 2002-05-01
  8. Weetzie Bat by Francesca Lia Block, 2004-07-01
  9. America's Neighborhood Bats: Understanding and Learning to Live in Harmony with Them by Merlin D. Tuttle, 2005-09-01
  10. Shakespeare Bats Cleanup by Ron Koertge, 2006-02-14
  11. Hello, Bumblebee Bat by Darrin Lunde, 2007-07-15
  12. There's a Bat In Bunk Five by Paula Danziger, 2006-03-23
  13. The Bat-Poet by Randall Jarrell, 1997-01-01
  14. The Rescue of Bat 21 by Darrel Whitcomb, 1999-02-09

21. Bat Printout- EnchantedLearning.com
bats are the only flying mammal. The vampire bat is the only bat (and the only mammal) that eats blood.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/mammals/bat/Batcoloring.shtml
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Bats Animal Printouts
Label Me! Printouts
Bats are the only flying mammals. They give birth to live young and nourish them with milk. Bats are nocturnal; they are most active at night and sleep during the day hanging upside-down. Bats are found in all types of habitats all around the world except at the poles. There are over 900 different species of bats. During the cold winter, some bats migrate to a warmer area. Some bats (like the brown bat) hibernate during the cold of winter, sleeping very deeply until warm weather arrives. Anatomy : Bat's wings are long fingers covered by thin skin. They have furry bodies. Some bats have short tails, other have no tail. Bats have weak legs and don't walk very well. The smallest bat is the bumblebee bat (with a wingspan of 6 inches=15 cm, weighing less than a penny); the biggest bat is the flying fox bat (with a wingspan of 6 feet=1.8 m, weighing 2 pounds=1 kg).

22. Bats And Rabies | Rabies
Information from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
http://www.cdc.gov/rabies/bats.html

23. Baseball Bats & Softball Bats Of All Varieties, Baseball Bat & Softball Bat Reso
Free shipping on a wide selection of Baseball Softball bats from companies like ABat, Akadema, Anderson, BamBooBat, Brett Bros, BWP, COMbat, Controlling The Game, D-Bat
http://www.justbats.com/

24. How To Identify And Get Rid Of Bat Problems: Bat Control & Removal: Trapping, Ca
Critter Control offers professional bat control and removal services to help get rid of bat problems and keep bats from entering your home. Call us today.
http://www.crittercontrol.com/facts/animals/bats.html
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      Bats
      Bats are the only flying mammal in the world, and bats are very beneficial in that they can eat over 500 flying insects per hour all night long.
      Why Are Bats Important Animals?
      contact a Critter Control professional in your area if you have bats within your home, as the proper precautions should be taken when removing bats.
      Bats will get stuck inside homes and other buildings during the end of summer and beginning of fall. As bats are so small, they can squeeze through tiny holes (only 3/8 inch wide!), typically entering through vents, end construction gaps, overhangs or eaves. Bats will also enter a home through open windows and chimneys. Once inside, bats will continue living within a building for years, until bat control and removal is implemented. If there are multiple bats within a building, this indicates a colony. Typical bat damage is urine stains and the collection of droppings. Most commonly, people complain about the noise: the scratching and crawling in attics and within walls, and their squeaking habits.

      Bat Control Solutions: Bat Exclusion
      The most effective method for getting rid of bats and keeping them out of the home is through exclusion. Sometimes, all that is necessary is to open a door or window to let the bats fly out. When bats are entering through small openings in the structure of a building, it may be necessary for a professional to seal off these holes in order to prevent the re-entry of bats.

25. Old Hickory Bat Company
Specializes in the manufacture of custom wood baseball bats.
http://www.oldhickorybats.com/

26. Basingstoke Amateur Theatrical Society
Basingstoke Amateur Theatrical Society (bats) the top amateur society in the region for musicals
http://bats.net/

27. Bats
Learn More About bats. Ecolog a de Murci lagos Bat Migration / La Micraci n En Murci lagos Bat Myths Costa Rican Bat Night Echolocation
http://www.thewildones.org/Animals/bat.html
Learn More About Bats
Teacher Resources
Student Work
Bats often make people think of vampires, creatures of the night, and Halloween. Beyond the myth and folklore, bats are one of the most important groups of animals. Bats are one of the most numerous kinds of mammals with nearly 1000 different species. They are highly adapted animals, and can be found in all but the coldest habitats. Bats are mammals that belong to the order Chiroptera (ky-rop-tera), which means, "winged hand". The wings or hands of a bat have very long finger bones covered by a strong skin. Bats are the only mammals that can fly. Like all mammals, they are "warm-blooded", have bodies covered with fur, and nurse their young (pups) with milk. There are two main groups of bats - the large "flying foxes" that eat fruit, and the smaller insect-eating bats. There are also bats that feed on the nectar of flowers, and those that eat small animals, like fish and frogs. Nearly all bats are helpful animals. In fact, tropical rainforests could not survive without bats. Bats are responsible for controlling pest insect populations, pollinating flowers, and dispersing seeds. One insect-eating bat can catch 500-1000 insects in one hour! Many plants must be pollinated by bats to produce fruit (see side bar). The only way some plants have of dispersing seeds is through bats.

28. Baseball & Softball Bats Of All Varieties, Baseball & Softball Bat Resources, Ba
Offers a warehouse of baseball and softball bats.
http://www.batwarehouse.com
Your Baseball And Softball Bat Warehouse. Same Business Day Express shipping, bat reviews plus much more.
Order Bats 1-866-380-2287 Bats in your cart
S earch: New Bat Wizard New Bat Reviews Products Customer Service Bat Resource Guide ... Compare Bats Bats Baseball Bat Categories Adult Baseball Bats Senior League Baseball Bats Youth Big Barrel Baseball Bats Youth Baseball Bats ... Closeout Baseball Bats Slow Pitch Bat Categories By Manufacturer By Type By Association Fastpitch Bat Categories By Manufacturer By Type By Length to Weight Ratio Baseball Bats A-Bat Akadema Americas' Bat Co. Anderson ... Zorian Bats Softball Bats A-Bat Akadema Anderson Baden ... Most Popular
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  • 29. Bat: Definition From Answers.com
    bats are classified in the phylum Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Mammalia, order Chiroptera. Bibliography. See R. W. Barbour and W. H. Davis, bats of America (1969); W. A
    http://www.answers.com/topic/bat

    30. Zorian Bat Company | Wood Baseball Bat,Solid Wood Baseball Bats,Wooden Bat,Zoria
    Offers a series of maple wood bats.
    http://www.zorianbats.com
    - see us on Fox News Featured Items
    Zorian Bat Company
    960 Reservoir Avenue
    Suite 30
    Cranston, RI 02910 USA
    Telephone: 401-709-4675
    Email: customerservice@zorianbats.com
    FAX: 401-884-1535

    31. Bats: Why Should We Care?
    How are bats like you?
    http://www.cccoe.k12.ca.us/bats/

    32. Bats
    Comprehensive information about Wind Cave National Park. What do you know about bats? Although bats are seldom seen in Wind Cave there are a few here
    http://www.nps.gov/archive/wica/Bats.htm
    Test Your Batting Average What do you know about bats? Although bats are seldom seen in Wind Cave there are a few here and throughout the area. Bats are shy creatures and want to avoid you as much as you might want to avoid them. Did you know?
    • Bats are the only mammals that can fly. Bats are NOT flying mice. Bats belong to a separate order of mammals called Chiroptera. Bats come in all different colors, shapes and varieties. Some are red, have huge ears, or have very unusual faces. Many of these attributes are related to their navigational system. One quarter of all mammal species are bats. Worldwide there are almost a thousand species of bats! In the US alone there are 39 species of bats. In some parts of the world, bats take the place of bees in pollinating plants. Little brown bats have life spans that may exceed 32 years.

    33. Bats, Chioptera, Their Biology And Their Control
    bats of North America, bat biology and bat control information.
    http://icwdm.org/handbook/mammals/bats.asp
    Home Ask the Expert Contact Site Map ... FAQ
    BATS
    Additional Info Bats Arthur M. Greenhall
    Research Associate
    Department of Mammalogy
    American Museum of Natural History
    New York, New York 10024 Stephen C. Frantz
    Vertebrate Vector Specialist
    Wadsworth Center for Laboratories
    and Research
    New York State Department of Health
    Albany, New York 12201-0509 Fig. 1. Little brown bat, Myotis lucifugus
    Introduction
    Conservation and Public Education Despite their ecological value, bats are relentlessly and unjustifiably persecuted. Bats are often killed because they live near people who needlessly fear them. These actions emphasize the need to educate the public on the reasons for bat conservation and why it is important to use safe, nondestructive methods to alleviate conflicts between people and bats. General sources of information on bats include states’ Cooperative Extension Services, universities, government environmental conservation and health departments, and Bat Conservation International (Austin, Texas). Except where control is necessary, bats should be appreciated from a distance — and not disturbed.
    Identification and Range
    Bats, the only mammals that truly fly, belong to the order Chiroptera. Their ability to fly, their secretiveness, and their nocturnal habits have contributed to bat folklore, superstition, and fear. They are worldwide in distribution and include about 900 species, second in number only to Rodentia (the rodents) among the mammals.

    34. Physics And Acoustics Of Baseball And Softball Bats
    Information on the physics of hitting a baseball or softball with a bat. Includes information on the sweet spot of a bat, wood vs. aluminum bats and how corked bats work.
    http://www.gmi.edu/~drussell/bats.html

    35. Bats
    bats. Janet Tyburec. bats make up one of the most diverse orders of mammals. Nearly 1000 species account for almost a quarter of the world’s mammal fauna—about 1 out of
    http://www.desertmuseum.org/books/nhsd_bats.html
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        Bats
        Janet Tyburec Bats make up one of the most diverse orders of mammals. Nearly 1000 species account for almost a quarter of the world’s mammal fauna—about 1 out of every 4 mammals on our planet is a bat! Global bat diversity is due in large part to the length of time bats have been on Earth. Paleontological study indicates that bats flew through the night skies over 50 million years ago. Fossil bats are very similar to those that exist today, giving few clues about their early ancestors. Fully evolved bats lived at a time when the predecessors of the horse were small, 3-toed, fox-like animals trotting around in the Eocene swamps. The bat order is divided into 18 different families with all members of each family sharing similar evolutionary paths, physical features, adaptations, and sometimes even foraging strategies. Some families are large, containing hundreds of species that can be found worldwide; other families are small, with some made up of a single species that is not closely related to any other species.
        Ghost-faced Bats
        This small family of bats, with 2 genera and 8 species worldwide, is restricted to warm tropical regions of the New World (North, Central, and South America). These bats typically roost in hot, humid caves, forming colonies in the hundreds to thousands of individuals. Bats in this family have flaps and folds of flesh around their mouths, often set off by large, obvious hairs or whiskers, character-istics that give them their common family name. It is suspected that these oral structures help to focus their echolocation calls or perhaps to funnel insects into their mouths. In addition, some family members have wing membranes covering the dorsal surfaces of their fur and meeting at midline along their backs, perhaps increasing the surface area of the wing membranes and thus helping the bats to dissipate heat. Bats in this family have long, narrow wings and are fast flyers, typically hawking (swooping hawk-like to catch) insects near pond surfaces.

    36. "Softball Bats"Sport And Outdoor Product Reviews And Prices - Epinions.com
    Reviews on Softball bats written by consumers at Epinions.com.
    http://www.epinions.com/sprt_Softball-Bats

    37. DEP Bat Fact Sheet
    Fact sheet about bats produced by the Connecticut DEPWildlife Division.
    http://www.ct.gov/dep/cwp/view.asp?a=2723&q=325964&depNav_GID=1655

    38. Donna Hensley's Bat Projects
    Donna Hensley shares some articles and projects produced during her 15 years as a bat researcher.
    http://www.geology.ewu.edu/bats/donna.htm
    Welcome to Donna Hensley's bat colony...
    Donna Hensley is a biologist with 15 years of research experience on bats (with four years of experience with Bat Conservation International Check out some of the terrific work that she's done while at BCI: More recently, during the summer 1998, Donna was called in for consultation by administrators at the Eastern State Hospital at West Medical Lake - their facilities had been recently colonized by bats. She proposed that in addition to evicting the bats (not extermination!) that the hospital maintenance staff construct a bat house adjacent to the building. Here are the details of this recent project . The Governor's office is following this project with great interest, and may consult with Donna regarding a similar problem at the Governor's Mansion in Olympia. Got a question about bats? Do you have bats in your belfry?

    39. Thematic Unit On Bats
    Back to The Wonderful World of bats JoAnn vonLubken . and . Linda Drew . May Street School . Hood River Co. School District
    http://www.tlgrant.r9esd.k12.or.us/english1/vonlubke/bats/batstext.html
    BATS Back to "The Wonderful World of Bats" JoAnn vonLubken and Linda Drew May Street School Hood River Co. School District OVERVIEW OF BAT INFORMATION: WHAT ARE BATS? Bats are members of a class of animals called mammals. They have hair and mother bats feed their pups with milk produced in their mammary glands. Bats differ from all other mammals in one most interesting way; they have wings and can fly. The scientific name, Chiroptera, means hand-wing. HOW DO BATS FLY? Bats fly by flapping their wings. The wings are moved by strong muscles in the back, chest, and shoulders. During the wing stroke, the part of the wing between the body and the fifth finger pushes downward against the air, providing lift. Lift is the force that keeps the bat aloft. The part of the wing between the second and the fifth fingers pushes backward against the air, providing thrust. Thrust is what keeps the bat moving forward. HOW MANY SPECIES OF BATS ARE THERE? There are roughly 850 species of bats. The order Chiroptera has two suborders, megabats and microbats. The majority of megabats belong to a group known as flying foxes. Their faces resemble the faces of foxes or dogs, with large eyes, simple ears, and simple noses. Microbats have small eyes, large ears, and complexly shaped noses.

    40. ! Rainforest Bats ! Tropical Rainforest, Far North Queensland Australia
    Feature on the large-eared horseshoe bat, and spectacled, black and little red species of flying fox, living in North Queensland, Australia.
    http://rainforest-australia.com/bats.htm
    Chambers Wildlife Rainforest Lodges
    Tropical North Queensland, Australia.
    Site Map
    Rainforest Search Engine
    Rainforest Bats
    Megabats

    Large-eared

    Horseshoe-bat
    Suborder Microchiroptera
    • Of the two suborders of bats, these are the bats most people around the world are more familiar with, as they are found practically everywhere. They are a much more diverse group than the 'Megabats'. There are 17 families, 135 genera and over 759 species (Robson 2002). T here are microchiropterans that have evolved to feed on insects, fish, fruit, nectar, blood and even other bats. M ost live in colonies in dark places where they roost upside down. They tend to be much smaller (sometimes tiny), have tails (with the flying membrane stretching between the legs and tail), use echolocation, are broadly insectivorous and have only one claw on the forelimbs (Robson 2002). The saying 'blind as a bat' is a reflection of the fact that many species have small eyes and that they tend to rely on another sense to make their way around. This other sense involves emitting high frequency calls from the throat, and projecting out the mouth or nose to detect the 'ultrasounds' as they reflect off other objects (echolocation).

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