Pale spear-nosed bats are nocturnal, spending the day roosting in hollow trees or the mouths of caves.
Variegated butterfly bats are nocturnal, spending the day roosting in trees in small groups of up to ten individuals.
They spend the day roosting in small groups in holes or crevices in trees or cliffs, typically close to water.
Short-tailed bats are nocturnal, spending the day roosting in hollow trees.
Tawny Frogmouths hunt at night and spend the day roosting on a dead log or tree branch close to the tree trunk.
They are active throughout the night, and spend the day roosting in trees.
They are nocturnal, spending the day roosting in large colonies in coastal caves or mine adits.
They spend the day roosting alone or in small groups consisting of a male and up to nine females and their young.
Owls are generally nocturnal and spend much of the day roosting.
They spend the day roosting in hollow trees, in burrows made by other animals, or beneath the thatched roofs of local buildings.