cerperal
Well-Known Member
I think it was last year, potentially the year before, a user on this forum made a post claiming to have been bitten by a bat at Chester Zoo. The story seemed awfully dubious and from what I can remember the user also said they hadn't even contacted the Zoo...Even so, I suppose the potential is still there. But given bats are superbly adapted to flying in the dark and generally avoiding objects, combined with the lack of a news story of anyone dying of rabies, I would imagine it was a fabrication or a misattribution.
As others have said free-flying bats are pretty much the norm in the UK, and from my experience Europe as well. Berlin, Prague and Schonbrunn all have free-flying fruit bats in tropical houses, with the bats tending to stick to the ceilings. Longleat in the UK has one of the more famous bat houses in this country, which recently reopened. I can't remember what species of bats are held, but they are classic 'cave' bats, and is one of the most popular exhibits
As others have said free-flying bats are pretty much the norm in the UK, and from my experience Europe as well. Berlin, Prague and Schonbrunn all have free-flying fruit bats in tropical houses, with the bats tending to stick to the ceilings. Longleat in the UK has one of the more famous bat houses in this country, which recently reopened. I can't remember what species of bats are held, but they are classic 'cave' bats, and is one of the most popular exhibits