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Tricks and Treats for a Green Halloween
Super Spiders
  Spider Basics
  Spider Anatomy
  Spider Prey Challenge
Go Batty
  Bat Basics
  Bat Anatomy
  BAT GRUB GAME
Awesome Owls
  Owl Basics
  Owl Anatomy
  Build a Screech Owl Box
 
  DID YOU
KNOW..??
Vampire bats are quite small, hardly the large intimidating creature found in most horror films. In order to have the bats show up better in movies, the harmless looking fruit bat, which has a much larger wing span, is often used!

  Audubon Adventures
This game and others can also be found in the bat issue of Audubon Adventures, our award-winning education program for grades 3-6. Order your Bat Pack from the Nature News Magazine category today, or browse the extensive list of other topics they provide


Bat Grub Game

Scroll down to see the answers filled in correct places. Thanks for trying out our game and we hope you enjoyed learning more about these icons of Halloween.
Flying foxes eat FRUIT.
The world’s largest bats are fruit-eaters. They have large eyes and a good sense of smell to help them find food even in the dark. While flying around snacking onfruit, they spread seeds that sprout into new trees.
Vampire bats eat BLOOD.
This small bat attacks prey as big as horses! While its prey is sleeping, the bat lands nearby. Creeping slowly on sturdy legs and thumbs, the bat approaches its prey. Then it uses its razor-like teeth to make a small cut. Chemicals in its spit keep the blood flowing as the bat laps up its meal.

Leaf-nosed bats eat FLYING INSECTS.
Many bats have weird-looking folds and flaps of skin on their faces, called nose leaves. These bats use echolocation to find insects in the dark. The nose leaves focus the bat’s chirping sounds, like cupping your hands around your mouth when you shout. Insect-eating bats help control bugs wherever they hunt.



Long-nosed bats eat NECTAR.
This desert bat flies around late at night searching for night-blooming cactus flowers. Once it finds an open blossom, it shoves its long snout down into the flower and drinks the nectar inside. Its tongue is as long as its body! Pollen hitches a ride on the bat’s head, pollinating the next flower it visits and helping to create seeds and new cacti.


Bulldog bats eat FISH.
This bat flies over ponds and rivers in a zigzag pattern while making echolocation chirps toward the water below. Once it detects a ripple in the water, the bat uses its long back legs with sharp, curved claws to spear its prey. Any splashed water runs right off its oily fur.
Pallid bats eat SCORPIONS.
This beige bat doesn’t catch prey in the air. Instead it flies low while listening for bugs. When its huge ears hear shuffling cricket or beetle feet, this bat swoops down to nab its prey off the ground. The bat even hunts a certain critter known for its poisonous sting because the sting doesn’t hurt the bat!


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