And it turns out it’s a pretty cool creature – it’s a “megabat” (great name) and its wingspan can be close to a metre wide. I think of bats as small and cuddly, but if something flew past that was that size, I’d be pretty nervous. Imagine if something that looked like this flew towards you with outstretched wings on a dark night:
And for extra scary points, it makes a pretty loud honking sound, so loud that it’s often considered a pest. This noise is how males attract females, and it’s so important that their internal organs are actually shaped around their ability to honk:
The most noticeable anatomical features of the male involve sound production. The larynx is one-half the length of the vertebral column and fills most of the thoracic cavity, pushing the heart, lungs and alimentary canal backward and sideways. — Hypsignathus monstrosus, by Paul Langevin and Robert M. R. Barclay, Mammalian Species Issue 357, 26 April 1990.
The most noticeable anatomical features of the male involve sound production. The larynx is one-half the length of the vertebral column and fills most of the thoracic cavity, pushing the heart, lungs and alimentary canal backward and sideways.
— Hypsignathus monstrosus, by Paul Langevin and Robert M. R. Barclay, Mammalian Species Issue 357, 26 April 1990.
That same paper also features a delightful description of the male nose, which sounds like somebody getting revenge for the way male authors describe women in novels:
Males have a large, square, truncated head (Tate, 1942) with enormous pendulous lips, ruffles around a warty snout and a hairless, split chin (Lang and Chapin, 1917).
I find myself down this sort of rabbit hole surprisingly often, and I’ve begun to think of it as “serendipitous search results”. Whatever Ziva is, she’s definitely not an African species of large bat, but it appeared in my search results anyway, and that was the start of some fun reading. At other times, I’ll look for a specific book at my local library, and they don’t have it, but I’ll end up reading half a dozen books with similar titles because that’s what the search could find.
If you want more pictures of cool bats, there are a bunch of them on iNaturalist. If not, I’ll see you next time I stumble upon something fun and unexpected while searching.