How fast can a flying fox go?

Flying foxes can travel at 6 m/s (13 mph) for three hours or more, and can reach top speeds of 8.6 m/s (19 mph).

What eats a spectacled flying fox?

They were considered vulnerable due to a significant decline in numbers as a result of loss of their prime feeding habitat and secluded camp sites. It has also been reported that spectacled flying foxes skim over the surface of water to drink and are sometimes eaten by crocodiles.

How big does a spectacled flying fox get?

The head and body length is 22–25 cm, forearm 16–18 cm, weight 400–1000 g. A large spectacled flying fox has pale yellow or straw-colored fur around its eyes.

How fast can a flying fox fly?

It is estimated that a single Flying-fox can dispense up-to 60,000 seeds in one night. Flying-foxes use the wind to travel long distances and have been recorded at speeds of 50 kilometres per hour although they average 25 – 30 kilometres per hour.

Where did the spectacled flying fox come from?

Spectacled flying foxes were first described in 1850 by Gould from a specimen collected on Fitzroy Island. They are important seed dispersers and pollinators of rainforest flora. Spectacled flying foxes have the smallest known distribution and population of the four Australian mainland Pteropus flying foxes.

What kind of Fox has straw coloured eyes?

Spectacled flying foxes have the smallest known distribution and population of the four Australian mainland Pteropus flying foxes. Spectacled flying foxes have distinctive straw-coloured fur around the eyes which gives them their name.

The head and body length is 22–25 cm, forearm 16–18 cm, weight 400–1000 g. A large spectacled flying fox has pale yellow or straw-colored fur around its eyes.

How many kilometres per hour does a flying fox fly?

They can fly at 35 – 40 kilometres per hour and may travel over 50 kilometres from their camp to a feeding area. They often share their camps with other flying-fox species. Breeding: Mating occurs in autumn and the female gives birth in late winter or spring when food is abundant.

Spectacled flying foxes were first described in 1850 by Gould from a specimen collected on Fitzroy Island. They are important seed dispersers and pollinators of rainforest flora. Spectacled flying foxes have the smallest known distribution and population of the four Australian mainland Pteropus flying foxes.

Where do spectacled flying foxes live in Queensland?

Coastal Queensland from Tully to the tip of Cape York and islands in Torres Strait. Spectacled flying foxes are generally found in or around rainforests and sometimes in mangroves associated with black flying foxes. Approximately 194,000 animals in the total population.