Night Stalker

Night stalkers are nocturnal bipedal flightless carnivorous leaf-nosed bats that are native to the main islands of the Galapagos Islands.

Description
They have slightly elongated bodies with brown fur covering their torsos. Their front legs are used as walking legs and their back legs with clawed feet being used as effective arms for grasping onto their prey. They have very large ears and noses for echolocation to help locate their prey at night, but they lack the eyes of their flying ancestors after becoming flightless for some reason. Their teeth are sharp in order to rip out chunks of flesh out of their victims.

Distribution
Night stalkers are found throughout the main islands across the Galapagos Islands.

Behavior
They can be solitary or social predatory animals, depending on a situation in an area. The solitary night stalkers can be territorial towards other night stalkers, but social ones will accept other night stalkers into their area. Despite their feirce appearances, night stalkers are actually peaceful and gentle towards dylanuses and towards any sapient species and beings, preying only on the native species and the invasive species on their native islands.

Conservation Status
Night stalkers are listed as least concern as they are't threatened by habitat loss. They also are used to hunting native land iguanas and Galapagos woolly-tailed rats, but they now prey on invasive brown rats, black rats, and goats after humans introduced them into Galapagos Islands, so night stalkers are actually increasing in numbers as an effect of more animals being introduced to the islands.