Subtitles section Play video
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Look Kashi our fur matches each other
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Hi guys, it's M today, I'm here with my buddy, Kashmir, or just Kashi for short
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He is an Indian fruit bat. He's not a pet bat. He doesn't live here at home
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That wouldn't be fair at all he actually belongs to the place
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I used to work at I've just brought him home so that I can do a video with him
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You will see me interacting with him in the video
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It's quite cute, but please don't think that it's okay to do this with any bat
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I don't endorse bats as pets although. He is insanely cute
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Please if you find a bat wherever you are in the world don't pick it up rabies is very serious
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And it is very prevalent in a lot of countries where a lot of you are watching so if you find a bat
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Please leave it alone contact your local wildlife
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Rehabilitator if you're in the United States or in the UK we do have a bat trust as well another note I'd like to add
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Is that Kashmir was not taken from the wild he was born in captivity in England and comes from a long line of captive bats
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Also, please remember to subscribe to my channel if you haven't already
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It's a fun place to be I bring you lots of weekly creature features
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And I'm gonna start inserting a couple of other things in there as well you having a quick clean
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Okay, you have a little clean take it. I'm not gonna hold it for you
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Okay, I'll hold it. I also just quickly want to shout out to the Birch, Please! Studio
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Especially to Fran who creates these amazing necklaces, and I just love this one it says
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"Swallows are so cliche" as the name Indian fruit that would suggest Kashmir comes from India
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He would live in a really really large colony they can be
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Hundreds strong and speaking of strong the other strong thing apart from the numbers is their odor it's not your fault
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But you do smell horrendous
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So they are indeed a very
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Smelly creature in fact a lot of people when they go traveling and they, they come across
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Colonies the first thing you'll notice is the smell, and the sound often you don't even see them until you've smelt them and, and heard
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Them because they are so loud although Indian fruit bats are listed as a nocturnal species meaning they wake up at night
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They're not strictly nocturnal Indian fruit bats along
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Australian fruit bats will periodically take opportunities to graze on fruit in the daytime as well as to bask in the Sun
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They will relax so much in the Sun that often you can see fruit bats
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Dangling from the trees with one foot whilst their wings hang down in total rest now
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I put out an Instagram post a couple of months ago where I showed Kashmir hanging upside down in my hand and I had this
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Backlash I had to remove the picture because everyone was going, "Why are you forcing him to live upside down?"
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Why why, would you do that?
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Well, they actually always live upside-down you'll never find a bat
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The right way up walking around Indian fruit bats have to feet with permanently hooked toenails and a pair of wings
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Many people expect to see these little hands and fingers somewhere on the bat's wing a bit like a sugar glider
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But actually the bat's wing is the bat's hand
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Indian fruit bat's wings are just like our own
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Fingered hands with skin stretched across them. their thumb is actually a hook seen here
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Which they used to move themselves around the trees and to hook onto branches to pull through it towards them?
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I haven't trained Kashmir to be upside down. He's just always upside down
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He will eat upside-down, he sleeps upside down
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He breeds upside down, and females will actually give birth upside down. When the females give birth
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They usually give birth to just one baby fruit bat
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And they actually have to catch the baby inside their wings so imagine that upside down they start to give birth
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They have to lick the infant in order to stimulate it to breathe and they have to catch it in their wing and hope that
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The baby holds on to them so that the baby doesn't fall off as the name also suggests
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They are also frugivorous meaning that they are predominantly fruit-eating bats, although. They are frugivorous
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They do have these really sharp
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Pointy teeth and those are used to grip onto fruits because fruits are often a round or a spherical shape and they don't have hands
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In order to be able to sort of hold an opposable thumbs to manipulate and be able to bite
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Effectively so they do have to have quite sharp teeth in order to grip that food
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And then what they'll do is they'll actually place it inside their wing and cradle that food whilst eating it upside down
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It's quite remarkable
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They really love the watery juicy fruits out there for example grapes
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And what they'll do they will start by turning the grape in their mouth
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Chewing at the same time whilst turning with those really pointy teeth and then they use their tongue
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Which is a triangular shape and quite long and and very ridgy as well
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They'll use that to press the food up to the top of their roof of their mouth
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Where they've got these bony ridges and they will scrape. So they basically go like this. They go
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*Chewing Sounds*
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So they just suck up all the
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Juicy bits swallow that and then spit out any of the skin and some of the larger seeds as well
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Kashmir and the other Indian fruit bats take the prize for the most adorable chamming or chewing sounds in the world they
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Definitely enjoy their food get ready to either fall in love or be severely repulsed
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*Bat Eating Sound*
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Now bats are really important if it weren't for bats there wouldn't be that many
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Rainforests because bats eat so much fruit that when they eat those seeds they carry them miles and miles away
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And then they deposit the seeds off in their droppings in their guano Indian fruit bats are luckily not endangered
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They're listed as of Least Concern which means that there are
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bountiful numbers of fruit bats in the wild however in the United States
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There's a horrible disease called white-nose which is starting to affect lots of populations of bats
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It's quite an epidemic and a lot of those bats with white nose
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Do die can you let go of my arm, please there? We go. Thank you. Tell me a secret
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I wish you guys could feel
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How it feels to have a bat sniffing your ear when they smell it actually vibrates really far deep inside your ear it almost feels
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Like there's a moth like right there just buzzing around yes, hello
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Laughter
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You're too cute Kashi, I hope my lighting hasn't changed too much
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I took the opportunity to go and get a little drinky drink of water
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Because it's good to stay hydrated, would you like to stay hydrated? Let me know oh you would. Yep I'm just gonna
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Guess that's his now *Laugh*
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As a bat living in a colony can be really dangerous because there is quite a straight hierarchy
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You've always got the really big impressive males
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And they get first choice of which females to breed with if you're a low ranking male or female you get bullied
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really really badly
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They're really aggressive to each other and if they sense any weakness in the group they try and stamp that out
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So if you are an outcast bat, or you're a low-ranking bat
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You actually sometimes have to crawl along the floor on your belly in order to get food because you'll get bullied out of the actual
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good ripe fruit
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Yes, I know. No you're a bit of a bully aren't you Kashmir's a bit of a bully
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It's hard to believe but he does bully the other bats a little bit in fact sometimes when bats are bullying each other and having
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Squabbles and scraps and they can tear this skin membrane on the side here luckily that skin membrane is very fast
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Healing so sometimes you can see bats and when they extend their wing you can see that that wing is
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actually
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Torn that will regenerate itself in most cases of course where these bats live there's lots of water around as well lots of lakes
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Lots of rivers and often they will fall into the water by accident, however. They can swim, fairly well
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It doesn't look particularly graceful
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It looks like the butterfly
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But they can paddle themselves back to shore now Kashmir's uncle was one of the oldest living bats in Britain
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He was about 41 years old when he passed away and his name was Eric
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Unfortunately the place I used to work at don't have any official documents to prove it
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But they are a very very long-lived animal in captivity you may have also heard of that term as blind as a bat
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Kashmir is certainly not blind and many bat species aren't blind and there are so many
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Different species in fact a quarter of all the mammals in the world are bat species so that is a lot of different bat species
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Kashmir's eyesight is decent
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He's got a great nose, but his best sense is his sense of hearing those ears are constantly twitching around he can hear everything
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Thank you guys so much for watching
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I hope that you enjoyed meeting
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Kashmir remember to hit that subscribe button down below become part of the creature crew and we'll see you in another creature feature soon Bye
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*Kissy sounds*
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He's pulling away, I'm getting denied here. Ha stole it. someone's at my door
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*Door sounds*
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Psst! Don't forget to subscribe