It was a rescue worthy of Batman.
A wave of frigid air triggered "hypothermic shock" in a colony of bats clinging to their roost beneath a bridge in Houston, a sprawling city in Texas.
Nearly frozen, the bats began losing their grip and falling to the pavement from nine meters (30 feet) up, the Houston Humane Society reported on its Facebook page.
As the cold wave intensified last Thursday, the group launched a bat rescue, gathering up 929 bats from the ground under the Waugh Bridge, and providing them heat and nutrition.
Most only needed warmth and water, but the most affected were placed in incubators and fed intravenously.
"Amazingly, most of (the) bats have survived," the society said.
Bat watching is a popular pastime in Texas, and a number of bridges have huge colonies.
The Waugh Bridge in Houston, Congress Bridge in Austin and Camden Street Bridge in San Antonio all draw visitors at dusk, when the bats leave en masse for nightly feeding forays.
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© Agence France-Presse
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