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| Update on flying fox pups rescued two weeks ago |
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They have already begun to stretch their wings and practise flapping. At about 12 weeks of age they will take their first flight. Flying-foxes are nature's gardners because they are the only pollinators and means of seed dispersal for particular rainforest trees. No bats, no forests. It's a simple environmental message. As wildlife carers, we enjoy raising orphaned flying-foxes not only for their crucial environmental role, but also because they are the only wildlife species that benefits from forming a bond with their human carer. We have to be careful not to humanise all other wiildlife species. Flying-foxes, on the other hand, bond with their human carer for the first 10 weeks of life then, just like human teenagers, only want to mix with their own kind and are not interested in their primary carers. At this point, we as wildlife carers are happy knowing we have done our job and will soon see the young flying-foxes flying free. These young flying-foxes are just three of the estimated 3,000 native animals who will be in care with WIRES volunteers this Christmas. |






