Rhinopomatidae live in
deserts and
semi-arid climates in North Africa and South Asia, from
Morocco and
Senegal to
South Sudan, the
Middle East and
India to
Myanmar,
Thailand, and North-
Sumatra. They also come to agricultural areas and disturbed areas. They are adaptable and live along walls with low
humidity and high
temperatures. They also use crevices, rock walls, houses, tombs (including the
Egyptian Pyramids, where they have been coming for more than three-thousand years), tunnels and caves as shelters. Animals from the more northern parts of South-Asia travel to winter colonies, where they become
torpid, although they do not truly
hibernate. In very dry periods during a food shortage they
estivate, where they live on their fat stores. Rhinopomatidae live in colonies of thousands, where they gather in small, scattered groups. Mixed groups are common but groups with only males or females also occur. They live in roosts of a thousand or more members, and have one or two young per year. They have poor flight endurance and fast fliers quickly become exhausted. They can also quickly run on the ground. They hunt small insects including
beetles that have flight altitudes of five to ten meters. ==Classification==