Behaviour

The most famous aspect of the vampire bat’s behaviour is of course its diet. Rather than sucking blood, it makes an initial incision with its incisors and then laps up the blood. The incisors are so sharp that the animal being fed from is unlikely to feel the bite. The bat’s saliva contains a substance that turns clotted blood back to liquid again, giving it longer to feed, but it rarely kills its prey and is unlikely to feed from a human. Instead these bats tend to target the abundant herds of livestock in Central and South America, and cause problems for farmers by spreading disease.

They also have a complex social life. Females generally give birth to a single offspring each year and feed it milk for the first two months of life, introducing regurgitated blood alongside the milk when the infant is one month old, and taking it hunting when it reaches four months old.

As well as infants, adult bats sometimes feed on regurgitated blood. Vampire bats can starve to death in just three days if their hunting is unsuccessful and adult bats will regurgitate for each other. Unrelated individuals create what seem to be long-term relationships, with the same bats feeding each other on many different occasions.