Oh, you think darkness is your ally? But you merely adopted the dark…
Prior-Assumption-245 on
Why did she open it?
Gamebird8 on
Storm drain*
Not sewer, no bats would be alive if it was a sewer
voidscreamer1 on
I think that’s encouraging that bats can live in there….bats are awesome, just don’t eat them.
prof_devilsadvocate on
how they go in n out there
Buddhadevine on
Should get a rabies shot just in case
IlSottoScr1tto on
The most thing beautiful you never found
MileHighEverybody on
![gif](giphy|oOK9AZGnf9b0c)
fuzzy_emojic on
Looks like one flew towards. She’s going to need a rabies shot now.
xX_stay_Xx on
r/Unexpected
Johnnyguiiiiitar on
When my dad used to throw open the curtains as a kid…
mcf_ on
Ozzy Osbourne holiday home
JanxAngel on
Aww! So full of cute!
Heavy-Excuse4218 on
Covid 24 origin story unlocked.
consultant_in on
![gif](giphy|3oriNJD8tJGsgeJjC8)
The crossover we need
AdmiralAndyDE on
In Switzerland there was a similar case.
100 Daubenton’s bats took up residence in a street canal.
>During maintenance work, employees discovered bats under a manhole cover. Apparently they used the sewer network as a place of refuge and nursery for raising their young.
The shaft in which the animals were found ends a good 1.4 kilometers further on, directly on the Limmat river. The bats have to travel this distance every day underground through tubes with a diameter of 1.2 meters to get to their hunting grounds.
It has long been known that Daubenton’s bats use a variety of roosts, such as tree hollows, roof stumps or bridge cracks, but it is a surprise that they penetrate so far into the artificial cave system of the sewer network to benefit from the warmth under the drain covers.
In a similar discovery in Germany in the summer of 2017, in which around 20 female Daubenton’s bats were found in a similar roost, the distance to the mouth of the river Regen was just 120 m.
19 Comments
Then woman closes drain and lets them sleep…
Seems like you found the entrance to my batcave
![gif](giphy|kg4e4Wksv20eY)
Oh, you think darkness is your ally? But you merely adopted the dark…
Why did she open it?
Storm drain*
Not sewer, no bats would be alive if it was a sewer
I think that’s encouraging that bats can live in there….bats are awesome, just don’t eat them.
how they go in n out there
Should get a rabies shot just in case
The most thing beautiful you never found
![gif](giphy|oOK9AZGnf9b0c)
Looks like one flew towards. She’s going to need a rabies shot now.
r/Unexpected
When my dad used to throw open the curtains as a kid…
Ozzy Osbourne holiday home
Aww! So full of cute!
Covid 24 origin story unlocked.
![gif](giphy|3oriNJD8tJGsgeJjC8)
The crossover we need
In Switzerland there was a similar case.
100 Daubenton’s bats took up residence in a street canal.
>During maintenance work, employees discovered bats under a manhole cover. Apparently they used the sewer network as a place of refuge and nursery for raising their young.
The shaft in which the animals were found ends a good 1.4 kilometers further on, directly on the Limmat river. The bats have to travel this distance every day underground through tubes with a diameter of 1.2 meters to get to their hunting grounds.
It has long been known that Daubenton’s bats use a variety of roosts, such as tree hollows, roof stumps or bridge cracks, but it is a surprise that they penetrate so far into the artificial cave system of the sewer network to benefit from the warmth under the drain covers.
In a similar discovery in Germany in the summer of 2017, in which around 20 female Daubenton’s bats were found in a similar roost, the distance to the mouth of the river Regen was just 120 m.
https://preview.redd.it/qdqrq0k7afid1.png?width=1118&format=png&auto=webp&s=5c71c3227f1c97d903c32728bd0bf957634d169c