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The Brighterside of News on MSNScientists solve the mystery of bat echolocationAs darkness falls and the air begins to cool, thousands of bats burst from the narrow mouth of their cave. The sky comes ...
It appears that the bats change the way they echolocate in order to gain detailed information about their neighbors nearby.
Bats avoid collisions by tuning their echolocation during mass cave exits, a new Tel Aviv University study finds.
"even in colonies of hundreds of thousands of bats all flying out of a small opening." How bats don't fatally crash into each other every night when they squeeze out of caves to forage is a ...
Bats are not scary, creepy or blood thirsty. In truth, says Sacramento State Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences Anna Doty, they are fascinating, valuable and resourceful creatures. Some of ...
Echolocation works by the bats making sounds which bounce off an object and ... Bats are the only true flying mammals in the world.
Wildlife authorities state that "the habitat structures will provide a safe environment for the local bat population." Area residents will have to endure some noise to accommodate these flying ...
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