Going through gold can often end up in the defeat of breaking the heart, since an intrepid bat learned last week when a cat from the Russian house hurt him and left him dead when he was only 127 miles less than a flight Of World Record.
In a statement that is established by the Bat Conservation Trust based on the United Kingdom (BCT), the long-distance brochure, a Pipistrellus Nathusii “Olympic Batty” by scientists, had already flown 1,253.9 miles (2,018 km) throughout Europe from its starting point in the United Kingdom when its Trek ended up in the Russian people of Moglino.
There, an unidentified cat knocked down the brochure, seriously injured and leaving it for dead on the ground. The Bat wounded was discovered by a resident of Moglino who notified a preservation group of local bats who came and rescued him, but could not save his life. Weighed only 8 grams and it was about the size of a thumb.
The bat also had a ring on his arm with the London Zoo written on him, so the group notified the BCT. It turns out that the bat was labeled by a volunteer bat recorder, Brian Briggs, in Bedfont Lakes Country Park, near Heathrow, London, in 2016.
“This is very exciting,” Briggs said. “It is great to be able to contribute to international conservation work to protect these extraordinary animals and learn more about their fascinating lives.”
The longest bat flight, according to Livescience, was also by a Fr. Nathusii, this flying from Latvia to Spain in 2019, covering a distance of 1,381 miles (2,223 km).
However, there are silver medals in the Olympic Games, and the Olympic BAT managed to record the second longest bat flight ever recorded. He divided some records in their own right, including the longest flight of Bat from the United Kingdom, and the longest bat flight during a migration west to this.
“Your trip is an exciting scientific finding and another piece in the BAT migration puzzle,” said Lisa, head of conservation services in BCT, he said. “The movements of Pipistrelles of Nathusius around the United Kingdom and between the United Kingdom and the continent are still greatly mysterious.”
“This is a remarkable and the longest trip we know about any Britain bat in all of Europe,” the worst added. “What Olympic!”
According to BCT, the Nathusius Pipistrelle National Project, launched in 2014, has registered more than 2,600 P. Nathusii in the United Kingdom to help study the reproductive habits of species, migration behaviors and distribution. Understand how and where these bats migrate, as well as where they established maternity colonies are crucial for conservation efforts.