Pteropus alecto Temminck, 1837 is a animal in the Pteropodidae family, order Chiroptera, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Pteropus alecto Temminck, 1837 (Pteropus alecto Temminck, 1837)
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Pteropus alecto Temminck, 1837

Pteropus alecto Temminck, 1837

Pteropus alecto, the black flying fox, is a large bat native to parts of Australia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, that breeds annually to produce one young.

Family
Genus
Pteropus
Order
Chiroptera
Class
Mammalia

About Pteropus alecto Temminck, 1837

Pteropus alecto Temminck, 1835, commonly called the black flying fox, has short black fur marked by a distinct contrasting reddish-brown mantle. This species has an average forearm length of 164 mm (6.46 in), an average body weight of 710 g (1.57 lb), and a wingspan exceeding 1 metre (39 in). It is counted among the largest bat species in the world. Black flying foxes are native to Australia (found in New South Wales, Queensland, the Northern Territory, and Western Australia), Papua New Guinea (found in Western Province), and Indonesia (found in West Papua, Sulawesi, Sumba, and Savu). Black flying foxes breed once per year. Females give birth to a single young, which the mother carries for the first month of the young's life. After this first month, the young is left in the roost while the mother forages at night.

Photo: (c) Karly F, all rights reserved, uploaded by Karly F

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Mammalia Chiroptera Pteropodidae Pteropus

More from Pteropodidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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