Some of the cited work in the article is from long-term collaborators (such as Dr. Gerald Carter at Princeton University) with whom I frequently interact and work together. You can probably picture a ...
Are climate change and hotter temperatures going to result in blood-drinking vampire bats swarming across Florida? Possibly someday, according to a new study published in the journal Ecography last ...
The study documents in-depth how the confluence of geography, population traits and climate change affect the spread of infectious disease from bats to other species and proposes new models for ...
For years, officials in Texas have been concerned about a blood-sucking bat native to Central and South America that has been spotted near the state's border with Mexico. Michael Bodenchuk, the ...
Scientist Simon Ripperger spends his days strapping tiny computers to the furry backs of vampire bats in Panama. These tracking sensors document social interactions in a process called biologging. "We ...
Yes, that's right, contrary to myth, vampire bats don't suck blood. They lap it, like a dog or cat laps water. But first, they make a small cut with their razor-sharp teeth, so sharp, that they can ...