Asked by jackson
1 Just before the sun sets in South Central Texas, the summer sky comes alive. It’s the time when Mexican free-tailed bats exit their home in Bracken Bat Cave. “For more than two hours, they leave the cave and spiral higher and higher into the air,” says biologist Gary F. McCracken.
2 At first, only a few bats fly out of the cave’s dark opening. Then hundreds and thousands more swirl out. Soon a huge cloud of as many as 20 million bats has formed in the dark sky. The flapping bat wings make a whooshing sound. Finally, the Mexican free-tailed bats fly out of sight.
A Supersize Cave
3 Bracken Bat Cave is huge—large enough to house the 20 million bats that roost there. Its entrance, a big hole in the ground, leads to a dark underground city. Unlike a human city that has many buildings, the cave is just one giant room, nearly 100 feet (30 m) wide.
4 During the day, the Mexican free-tailed bats rest and sleep safely in this giant city. They hang upside-down from the cave’s jagged ceiling. Hooked claws and special tendons in their feet let them cling to the stony ceiling without tiring. In this position, they can hide from predators such as snakes or quickly launch into flight when it’s time to feed.
On a Mission
5 The group that leaves Bracken Bat Cave each night is so large that it can be tracked by radar. Radar is commonly used to predict weather by following moving objects, such as raindrops, in the sky. “To radar, the millions of bats emerging from their cave look like a huge storm,” says Gary F. McCracken. Where are all these bats going?
6 Gary has learned that the bats leave Bracken Bat Cave to hunt insects in the surrounding area. How does he know this? The radar can also detect the billions of bugs that swarm the Texas sky.
7 The bats will eat about 200 tons (181 metric tons) of these bugs in one night. These insects, mostly moths and beetles, can destroy crops, so many farmers are glad to have the bats around.
Winged Hunters
8 How do bats catch insects? As they soar high into the air, the bats use their wings to scoop prey into their mouths. All bats have almost hairless wings, which are like hands but with webbing to connect their fingers.
9 Since it’s dark when they hunt, bats use echolocation to find their prey. In this process, bats send out high-pitched sounds that travel in waves. These sound waves bounce off objects and return to the bats as echoes. Bats can determine the size and shape of an object and how far away it is by listening to the echoes.
The Future
10 Protecting bat habitats is a good way to help keep these animals safe. Some bat conservation groups have built special gates at cave openings. The gates prevent people from disturbing sleeping bats.
11 Another way to help bats is for people to build bat houses. These homes not only give the bats a safe place to live, but many farmers now put these up to attract bats because they eat insects that can destroy their crops. More bats mean that there will be fewer insects to destroy human food. Scientists are hoping these efforts will keep bats safe and help their dark cities thrive for years to come.
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Quick summary
- Each evening up to 20 million Mexican free‑tailed bats leave Bracken Bat Cave in South Central Texas, forming huge spirals that can be tracked by radar. They roost in a very large single‑room cave during the day and hunt insects at night, using wing scooping and echolocation. Bats eat huge numbers of crop‑damaging insects, so conservation efforts (gated cave entrances and bat houses) help protect both bats and agriculture.
Main idea
- Bracken Bat Cave is home to millions of Mexican free‑tailed bats whose nightly emergence and insect feeding are ecologically important, and conservation efforts help protect these bats.
Short comprehension questions (with answers)
1) Where do the bats live during the day?
- In Bracken Bat Cave, a single giant cave room where they hang upside down from the ceiling.
2) How many bats might form the evening cloud?
- As many as 20 million.
3) How do scientists track the bats leaving the cave?
- Using radar, which detects the bats as a huge moving mass.
4) What do the bats mainly eat and why is this important?
- Mostly moths and beetles; they eat large numbers of crop‑damaging insects (about 200 tons in one night), which helps farmers.
5) Name two conservation measures mentioned.
- Building gates at cave openings to prevent disturbance and putting up bat houses to provide safe roosts.
Key vocabulary
- Echolocation: Using high‑pitched sounds that bounce back as echoes so bats can detect objects, their size, shape, and distance.
- Roost: A place where bats rest or sleep (the cave is their roost).
- Tendons: The tough tissues in the bats’ feet that allow them to hang upside down without tiring.
Tell me which of the tasks above you’d like me to do next (detailed summary, paragraph summaries, more practice questions, a quiz, lesson plan, vocabulary activities, etc.).
Quick summary
- Each evening up to 20 million Mexican free‑tailed bats leave Bracken Bat Cave in South Central Texas, forming huge spirals that can be tracked by radar. They roost in a very large single‑room cave during the day and hunt insects at night, using wing scooping and echolocation. Bats eat huge numbers of crop‑damaging insects, so conservation efforts (gated cave entrances and bat houses) help protect both bats and agriculture.
Main idea
- Bracken Bat Cave is home to millions of Mexican free‑tailed bats whose nightly emergence and insect feeding are ecologically important, and conservation efforts help protect these bats.
Short comprehension questions (with answers)
1) Where do the bats live during the day?
- In Bracken Bat Cave, a single giant cave room where they hang upside down from the ceiling.
2) How many bats might form the evening cloud?
- As many as 20 million.
3) How do scientists track the bats leaving the cave?
- Using radar, which detects the bats as a huge moving mass.
4) What do the bats mainly eat and why is this important?
- Mostly moths and beetles; they eat large numbers of crop‑damaging insects (about 200 tons in one night), which helps farmers.
5) Name two conservation measures mentioned.
- Building gates at cave openings to prevent disturbance and putting up bat houses to provide safe roosts.
Key vocabulary
- Echolocation: Using high‑pitched sounds that bounce back as echoes so bats can detect objects, their size, shape, and distance.
- Roost: A place where bats rest or sleep (the cave is their roost).
- Tendons: The tough tissues in the bats’ feet that allow them to hang upside down without tiring.
Tell me which of the tasks above you’d like me to do next (detailed summary, paragraph summaries, more practice questions, a quiz, lesson plan, vocabulary activities, etc.).
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