Nature - 1st prize
Kieran Dodds
Evening Times / The Herald
Evening Times / The Herald
30 November, 2005
Bats return to roost after a nightly forage, in which they can fly over 100km and consume twice their body weight in fruit. Every year an estimated eight million straw-colored fruit bats (Eidolon helvum) are among the seven different bat species that arrive in the abundant Kasanka National Park in October. Despite the scale of the migration little is known about where the bats come from or where they go. Satellite transmitters have been placed on four animals to trace their movements. Early data show that they travel thousands of kilometers after departing Zambia, in search of food.
Kieran Dodds
His investigative approach places complex news in context and seeks significant detail overlooked in daily reporting. His personal work considers the role of environment in cultu...