释义 |
Definition of mouse-eared bat in English: mouse-eared batnoun A myotis bat that has mouse-like ears and mainly brownish fur. 鼠耳蝠 Genus Myotis, family Vespertilionidae: several species, in particular the large M. myotis, found from SW Europe to Asia Minor Example sentencesExamples - On mainland Europe the greater mouse-eared bat is common in areas and known to travel over a 100 miles from summer to winter haunts.
- The animal, a young male greater mouse-eared bat, was found hibernating in Sussex, in southern England.
- The greater mouse-eared bat is one of the largest bats in Europe, and females are larger than males.
- The large mouse-eared bat eats insects caught in flight as well as beetles taken on the ground.
- Only occasionally have greater mouse-eared bats been found in tree holes during hibernation.
- This assumption is borne out by the fact that, in the vicinity of Nietoperek, only one relatively small breeding colony of mouse-eared bats is known, which returns each spring.
- The researchers used mouse-eared bats for the study and recreated four artificial microhabitats, each mimicking foraging conditions faced by bats in nature.
- Greater mouse-eared bats usually hang in great concentrations by the roof and choose warmer parts of caves.
- The little brown bat is the smallest of the mouse-eared bat species, all belonging to the genus Myotis.
- The Myotis or mouse-eared bats are a genus of small, plain brown bats and include the most common and numerous species in the country.
- In the early 1990s the greater mouse-eared bat became the first British mammal to become extinct since the wolf.
- For example, mouse-eared bats use echolocation to detect airborne prey, but almost ‘switch off’ echolocation when detecting prey under leaf litter.
- The area around Miedzyrzecz itself is home to only a small all year round bat population, the biggest of these is a colony of mouse-eared bats, which breed in and around the village of Nietoperek.
- Food availability dictates the timing of parturition in insectivorous mouse-eared bats.
Definition of mouse-eared bat in US English: mouse-eared batnoun another term for myotis Example sentencesExamples - Only occasionally have greater mouse-eared bats been found in tree holes during hibernation.
- This assumption is borne out by the fact that, in the vicinity of Nietoperek, only one relatively small breeding colony of mouse-eared bats is known, which returns each spring.
- The Myotis or mouse-eared bats are a genus of small, plain brown bats and include the most common and numerous species in the country.
- Greater mouse-eared bats usually hang in great concentrations by the roof and choose warmer parts of caves.
- The greater mouse-eared bat is one of the largest bats in Europe, and females are larger than males.
- The animal, a young male greater mouse-eared bat, was found hibernating in Sussex, in southern England.
- The large mouse-eared bat eats insects caught in flight as well as beetles taken on the ground.
- On mainland Europe the greater mouse-eared bat is common in areas and known to travel over a 100 miles from summer to winter haunts.
- In the early 1990s the greater mouse-eared bat became the first British mammal to become extinct since the wolf.
- The researchers used mouse-eared bats for the study and recreated four artificial microhabitats, each mimicking foraging conditions faced by bats in nature.
- For example, mouse-eared bats use echolocation to detect airborne prey, but almost ‘switch off’ echolocation when detecting prey under leaf litter.
- Food availability dictates the timing of parturition in insectivorous mouse-eared bats.
- The area around Miedzyrzecz itself is home to only a small all year round bat population, the biggest of these is a colony of mouse-eared bats, which breed in and around the village of Nietoperek.
- The little brown bat is the smallest of the mouse-eared bat species, all belonging to the genus Myotis.
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