How many baby Intermediate long-fingered bats are in a litter?
A Intermediate long-fingered bat (Miniopterus medius) usually gives birth to around 1 babies.
Upon birth, they weight 834 grams (1.84 lbs) and measure 6 cm (0′ 3″). They are a member of the Vespertilionidae family (genus: Miniopterus). An adult Intermediate long-fingered bat grows up to a size of 10.4 cm (0′ 5″).
To have a reference: Humans obviously usually have a litter size of one ;). Their babies are in the womb of their mother for 280 days (40 weeks) and reach an average size of 1.65m (5′ 5″). They weight in at 62 kg (137 lbs), which is obviously highly individual, and reach an average age of 75 years.
The intermediate long-fingered bat (Miniopterus medius) is a species of vesper bat in the family Vespertilionidae.It can be found in the following countries:Native: Indonesia (Jawa, Kalimantan, Sulawesi), Malaysia and Thailand.Presence uncertain: Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands,
Other animals of the family Vespertilionidae
Intermediate long-fingered bat is a member of the Vespertilionidae, as are these animals:
- Peters’s trumpet-eared bat with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Southern forest bat with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Rüppell’s pipistrelle with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Western false pipistrelle weighting only 23 grams
- Black-gilded pipistrelle weighting only 10 grams
- Melck’s house bat with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Cape serotine with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Townsend’s big-eared bat with 1 babies per pregnancy
- Cape hairy bat weighting only 13 grams
- Rendall’s serotine weighting only 6 grams
Animals that share a litter size with Intermediate long-fingered bat
Those animals also give birth to 1 babies at once:
- Maxwell’s duiker
- Lesser noctule
- Spix’s night monkey
- Walrus
- Mountain tapir
- Verreaux’s sifaka
- Sri Lankan spotted chevrotain
- Brown-throated sloth
- Lesser great leaf-nosed bat
- Mongoose lemur
Animals with the same weight as a Intermediate long-fingered bat
What other animals weight around 11 grams (0.02 lbs)?
- Damara woolly bat weighting 10 grams
- Tailed tailless bat weighting 10 grams
- Ridley’s leaf-nosed bat weighting 9 grams
- Thomas’s small-eared shrew weighting 12 grams
- Little free-tailed bat weighting 10 grams
- Merida small-eared shrew weighting 12 grams
- Gray climbing mouse weighting 9 grams
- Southern birch mouse weighting 11 grams
- Arizona pocket mouse weighting 11 grams
- Black-gilded pipistrelle weighting 10 grams