About Flying-foxes
Flying-foxes home | About Flying-foxes | Management Plan | Melbourne's Flying-foxes | Flying-foxes and people | FAQs | Fact sheets & media releases
- Description
- Distribution & Habitat
- Camp
- Behaviour & Breeding
- Diet
- Conservation Status
- Ecological Importance
Description
Flying-foxes are mammals and are members of the Pteropididae or fruit bat family. They have the largest body size of all bats. Four species of these mammals are native to mainland Australia: the Little Red Flying-fox, the Black Flying-fox, the Grey-headed Flying-fox and the Spectacled Flying-fox. (Images: Bruce Thomson QPWS. Courtesy Queensland Flying-fox Consultative Committee)
![]() Little Red Flying-Fox | ![]() Black Flying-Fox | ![]() Grey-headed Flying-Fox | ![]() Spectacled Flying-Fox |
The Grey-headed Flying-fox (Pteropus poliocephalus) is the largest member of the family. Its wingspan can reach one metre and it can weigh up to one kilogram. It is easily identified by its size, wide collar of golden-orange fur and leg fur that extends to the ankles.
Flying-foxes have large eyes which are highly adapted for day and night vision and particularly suited to recognising colours at night. Colour recognition is important when searching for food.
Page Top
Distribution & Habitat
Flying-foxes are found throughout tropical and sub-tropical Asia and Australia and on islands of the Indian and western Pacific Oceans. The four Flying-fox species found in Australia occur mostly in northern and eastern temperate and sub-tropical coastal areas. (Maps: Courtesy Queensland Flying-fox Consultative Committee)
![]() Little Red Flying-Fox | ![]() Black Flying-Fox | ![]() Grey-headed Flying-Fox | ![]() Spectacled Flying-Fox |
| Flying-foxes are nomadic animals; their movement patterns and local distribution are determined by variations in climate and the flowering and fruiting patterns of their preferred food plants. Flying-fox numbers and distribution in Australia have changed markedly since European settlement. Loss of natural habitat and food supply in New South Wales and Queensland due to land clearing and human culling in the past has rapidly reduced numbers of some species in eastern Australia. Grey-headed Flying-fox and Spectacled Flying-fox numbers have decreased to such an extent that they are both listed as threatened under the Commonwealth Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999. This loss of habitat and the creation of new habitat and year round food supply in suburban areas over the last 30 years, has meant changes have occurred in Flying-fox distribution. For example, the range of the Grey-headed Flying-fox has contracted in the northern area (southern Queensland and northern New South Wales) and expanded southwards into Victoria. The Grey-headed Flying-fox has adapted its behaviour to take advantage of new habitat and reliable food supplies. Permanent camp sites have been established close to or in suburban areas of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne where planting and watering of trees has produced a year-round food supply of native nectar, blossom, fruit and leaves. Flying-foxes roost (rest hanging upside-down) in a wide range of warm and moist habitats, including gullies in lowland rainforest, coastal stringybark forests and mangroves, often beside a creek or water. | ![]() |
Page Top
Camp
| Flying-foxes usually set up their camps in tall and reasonably dense vegetation. But they are also tolerant of people. The permanent camp sites established in suburban areas of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne enable the animals to take advantage of conditions provided by humans. There are more reliable food supplies from well watered trees, street lights may be used as a navigational aid and they are safer from shooting. Camp sites can be permanent or temporary and can include up to tens of thousands of individuals. During the breeding season the camp size can change dramatically due to the availability of food and the arrival of animals from interstate. For example, during summer-autumn, the Grey-headed Flying-fox camp at Yarra Bend Park, Melbourne, expands from around 6,000 to more than 30,000 individuals. Camp sites where young are born become very important to them. Some camps in New South Wales have been used for over a century. While in camp, Flying-foxes hang upside-down in trees usually folding their wings beside or around them. Continual use of these camp sites, such as during the breeding season, can damage vegetation, stripping branches of leaves. Camps have their owns smells and sounds. Males use strongly-scented secretions to mark mating territories and loud calls are made when defending those territories and during mating. | ![]() |
Page Top
Behaviour and Breeding
| Flying-foxes are intelligent, social and nocturnal. They roost together in large numbers at a 'camp' during the day and feed individually or in small groups at night and feed up-to 50km from their roost site. Around dusk each evening, adults and adolescents leave the camp to search for food. This evening fly-out is a spectacular sight, especially during the breeding season, when camp size is greatest. The timing of departure appears to be influenced by availability of food. If food is in short supply or a long distance away, they will leave before sundown. When food is plentiful or nearby, or when there is a full moon, they will leave well after dark. They are vocal animals; more than 30 different calls have been recorded for Grey-headed Flying-foxes. The different calls are associated with specific behaviours such as mating, finding young in the camp and in territorial disputes over food. Loud calls may be heard during mating and when defending their territory such as feeding trees. Grey-headed Flying-foxes conceive in March and April, but mating activity can occur over many months. Flying-foxes are placental mammals, giving birth to live young. They give birth to a single young per year from about September to late November. The baby clings to the mother’s belly for the first three weeks until it becomes too heavy to carry. At three weeks old the young is left at a “crèche” in the centre of the camp at night while its mother flies out to feed. Mothers return just before dawn and can recognise their young by their smell. | ![]() |
Page Top
Diet
| Flying-foxes prefer blossom, nectar, fruit and occasionally leaves of native plants, particularly eucalypts, tea-trees, grevilleas, figs and lilly pillys. They will also take the fruit of cultivated trees, particularly during periods of shortage of their preferred food. Flying-foxes prefer to feed close to where they roost. so most feeding is done within five to 15 kilometres from the campsite. However, they can travel up to 50 kilometres (100km round trip) in search of native nectar, blossom and fruit. When a productive food source is found, individuals establish and defend their feeding territory, returning night after night to the same trees for up to a month or more or until the food source is depleted. Feeding groups vary from single individuals up to half a dozen or more in a single tree. | ![]() |
Page Top
Conservation Status
Of the four species of Flying-foxes in Australia, both the Grey-headed Flying-fox and the Spectacled Flying-fox are listed as threatened under the Commonwealth Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999. They are considered "vulnerable" due to a significant decline in numbers as a result of loss of their prime feeding habitat and secluded camp sites.
Both species are potentially at risk of extinction. This is due to a slow reproductive rate (one young per year), the relatively long time for males to become sexually mature (in the wild the average age for sexual maturity is 30 months, the average life span is 4 years) and the high rate of infant mortality.
The Grey-headed Flying-fox is also listed as a threatened species under the Victorian Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988.
Page Top
Ecological Importance
Flying-foxes play a major role in the regeneration of native hardwood forests and rainforests by pollinating as they feed and dispersing seeds as they move throughout the forest. It is estimated that a single Flying-fox can dispense up-to 60,000 seeds in one night.
Through this role they provide habitat for other flora and fauna species and add value for other forest uses such as hardwood timber, honey and natïve plant industries.
Page Top













