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Pteropus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bats of the genus Pteropus , belonging to the Megachiroptera sub-order, are the largest bats in the world. They are commonly known as the Fruit Bats or Flying Foxes among other numerous coll...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pteropus
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Flying fox (cablecar) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In South Africa it is referred to as a Foofy Slide. The cable is fixed at both ends and runs through one or more pulleys attached to the car. The car itself can consist of anything from a simple handl...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_fox_(cablecar)
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Information about the flying fox. ... The animal featured on the cover of Sendmail is the flying fox, a species of fruit bat found chiefly on the islands of the Malay-Indonesia archipelago. Of about four thousand species of mammals, nearly one-quarter are bats;
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www.sonic.net/~mk/work/flyingfox.html
www.sonic.net/~mk/work/flyingfox.html
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Indian flying fox of Asia and Australia are the largest of all bats ... The Indian flying fox lives in tropical forests and swamps, primarily in coastal areas. Where it does live inland, the bat is seldom found far from large areas of water. It is wide spread throughout the Indian subcontinent and is also found on the...
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www.wonderclub.com/Wildlife/mammals/indianflyingfox.htm...
www.wonderclub.com/Wildlife/mammals/indianflyingfox.html
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Public involvement is vital if we are to resolve some important questions about flying-fox biology: ... orchard damage - which kinds of flying-fox are involved? which crops are affected? what areas and times of the year ?
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fennerschool-associated.anu.edu.au/batatlas/at_foxes.ht...
fennerschool-associated.anu.edu.au/batatlas/at_foxes.html
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Flying foxes (fruitbats) are megachiropterans. They are important in forest ecology both as pollinators and as seed dispersers. Pteropus alecto - the black flying fox - is the largest species in Australia, and, with a wingspan exceding a metre, among the largest bats in the world.
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www.jcu.edu.au/school/tbiol/zoology/local/flyingfx.htm
www.jcu.edu.au/school/tbiol/zoology/local/flyingfx.htm
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