The Blood Feeding Vampire Bats videos adidarwinian1

The Blood Feeding Vampire Bats Videos

The Blood Feeding Vampire Bats Videos

Rare Yet Real Videos

Watch out the Rare Videos

The Vampire bats videos show blood feeding by Vampire bats, their food (blood) sharing habits, and much more about the Vampire bats.

Click the Play Button to Watch the Real Video or Let it be Auto-loaded and then Click Play Button

Content on this page requires a newer version of Adobe Flash Player.

Get Adobe Flash player

Click the Play Button to Watch the Real Video or Let it be Auto-loaded and then Click Play Button

Content on this page requires a newer version of Adobe Flash Player.

Get Adobe Flash player

For feeding on the blood of an animal (prey), the vampire bat lands near a glabrous (hairless) and thin area on the animal’s skin, for example, the shoulder or hoof of the animal. Then, cautiously and discreetly, the blood feeding bat moves to a specific spot on the skin, licks that area, and then makes a small, painless incision into the skin of its prey. Then, the vampire bat laps up the animal’s blood, just like kittens, instead of sucking it as is depicted in horror scripts. The saliva of a vampire bat has an extremely potent blood-clot dissolving enzyme (thrombolytic enzyme). This enzyme keeps the blood of the victim in a fluid state, so that the bat can easily get its nutritious feed. In medicine, this enzyme is used to treat certain clotting disorders of human beings.

Or, Watch The Blood Feeding Vampire Bats Video by Downloading it. To download the rare yet real videos click on the real videos link placed over the image below or simply click on the rare videos image, and then save the file to your computer.

The Blood Feeding Vampire Bats – The Sanguivorous Mammals – Real Video

The Blood Feeding Vampire Bats Video - adidarwinian

Books On Vampire Bats –

Vampire Bats (Naturebooks: Mammals) – at Amazon.com/Books

Vampire Bats (The Library of Bats) – at Amazon.com/Books

Stokes Beginner’s Guide to Bats – at Amazon.com/Books

Bats of the United States and Canada – at Amazon.com/Books

Understanding Bats – at Amazon.com/Books

About the Author 

Dr. Aditya Sardana is a practitioner of electro-homeopathy and other systems of alternative medicine. He is also a naturalist; bioinformaticist; pharmacist; rationalist; science enthusiast; and a writer, editor and books' author who writes for various domains including health, medicine, biology, technology, science, etc.

19 thoughts on “The Blood Feeding Vampire Bats Videos

  1. Pingback: vampy

  2. Pingback: Rohit M.

  3. Pingback: The Blood Feeding Vampire Bats – The Sanguivorous Mammals!!

  4. Pingback: The Exquisite Birds of Paradise – History and Mystery Deciphered!! | adidarwinian

  5. Ewan

    Bats are truly one of nature’s great mysteries. They are reminders of the veritable variety of things that can jumbled up into one creature, and at the same time, vampire bats can be terrific vectors for rabies and other terrible things. Still they really don’t bother us unless we bother them, and when they do there is a huge price to pay on our part.

    Reply
  6. Raksha

    I enjoyed this post.I always wanted to know about blood feeding Bats and this video is exciting. I want to read more of your blogs and watch many such videos. Thanks for sharing information with us in such a thrilling way. I am a fan of your work.

    Reply
      1. Henry

        My mother wrote a long article on vampire bats and bat rabies for national geographic channel, that is why I know much about bats. I liked your Vampire Bats Videos which are Rare Yet Real Videos.

        Reply
    1. Noy

      Fruit bats are absolutely beautiful. Flying foxes. I read Stellaluna to the kids when they were old enough to appreciate it and we all fell in love with this female fruit bat of Janell Cannon. But those sonar-echolocation-weird-nosed-big-eared vampire bat versions are different beasts entirely. Pretty neat from an evolutionary viewpoint though, I have to admit.

      Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*