Sun.Star Pampanga

Hundreds of 'boiled' bats fall from sky in Australian heat wave

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More than 200 bats have lost their lives to southern Australia's ongoing heat wave.

As temperatur­es rose to 111.5 degrees Fahrenheit (44.2 degrees Celsius) in Campbellto­wn in the Australian state of New South Wales, a colony of flying fox bats that lives near the town's train station felt the ef f ect s. Volunteers struggled to rescue the heat-stricken bats, according to the Campbellto­wnMacarthu­r Advertiser, but at least 204 individual animals, mostly babies, died.

"They basically boil," Kate Ryan, the colony manager for the Campbellto­wn bats, told the newspaper. "It affects their brain — their brain just fries and they become incoherent."

Rescuers with Help Save the Wildlife and Bushlands in Campbellto­wn posted on their Facebook page details of the dire situation: "As the dead bodies were recovered and placed in a pile for a head count the numbers had reached 200 not including the many hundreds that were still left in trees being unreachabl­e, sadly a few adults were also included in the body count. It was a long and heartbreak­ing afternoon..."

Heat and more heat The colony of flying foxes in Campbellto­wn belong to the species Pteropus poliocepha­lus, better known as the gray-headed flying fox. Their wingspans can stretch more than 3.3 feet (1 meter), and they can weigh more than 2.2 lbs. (1 kilogram). Important pollinator­s, the bats eat mainly nectar, pollen and fruit.

Temperatur­es higher than 86 degrees F (30 degrees C) can be dangerous to young flying foxes, Ryan told the Advertiser, because their bodies lose the ability to regulate their temperatur­e. For the Campbellto­wn colony, a lack of both water and shade exacerbate­s the problem, she said.

Southern Australia's heat has reached far beyond 86 degrees F in the past several days. Most of New South Wales is experienci­ng a severe heat wave, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorolog­y. On Jan. 6, a weather station in the Sydney suburb of Penrith recorded a reading of 116.78 degrees F (47.1 degrees C), the hottest in the Sydney metro area since 1939, when a nearby station recorded a temperatur­e of 118.04 degrees F (47.8 C).

The most extreme heat is expected to abate in the coming days, though meteorolog­ists said a lower-intensity heat wave will persist throughout much of the state of Queensland, northern New South Wales and southern Central Australia through at least Wednesday (Jan. 10). Climate backdrop Australia is no stranger to extreme heat, but climate change is tilting the odds toward more heat waves, said Gerald Meehl, the head of the climate change research section at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheri­c Research (NCAR).

"They're occurring under the framework of background temperatur­es being warmer, so a naturally occurring heat wave becomes more intense," Meehl told Live Science.

In the first decade of the 21st century, there were two daily maximum temperatur­e records set for every daily minimum temperatur­e record, Meehl said. In other words, heat records outpaced cold records two to one. The ratio is only growing, Meehl said: In 2017, daily heat records outpaced daily cold records five to one.

"That's projected to continue to increase," Meehl said. Australia's current heat wave echoes a similar one the continent experience­d in 2013. According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorolog­y, that summer set records for the warmest September to March, the hottest summer, the hottest month and the hottest day.

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