Egyptian Fruit Bat
          
           Egyptian Fruit Bat
          Rousettus aegyptiacus
           
    
  
              Egyptian Fruit Bat
          
           Egyptian Fruit Bat
          Rousettus aegyptiacus
           
    - 
        Class
 Mammalia
- 
        Order
 Chiroptera
- 
        Familly
 Pteropodidae
- 
                   12–19cm wing span 12–19cm wing span
- 
                   80–170g 80–170g
- 
                 about 4 months about 4 months
- 
                 1 1
- 
                 up to 25 years in zoos up to 25 years in zoos
- 
            Diet
 frugivorous (fruits, flowers, pollen...)
- 
            Habitat
 savannah, forest, caves, ruins...
- 
          Range
 west, south and east Africa, Egypt, Turkey, Arabian Peninsula, Palestine, Syria, Cyprus
- 
              Population in the wild
 Stable
- 
                IUCN REDLIST status 
     
This species lives in colonies of up to several thousand bats. During the day, Egyptian Fruit Bat rest in dark caves or ruins, or sometimes in trees. At the end of the afternoon they head out in search of ripe fruit, their favourite food.
 
Their vision and sense of smell are extremely strong. To find their way in the dark, they use both sight and echo-location (making clicking sounds with their tongue).
 
Egyptian Fruit Bats are killed for their meat or because they destroy crops, but they are not endangered for the moment given their large range and high numbers.

 
 
 
 
        