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  2. Animal echolocation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_echolocation

    Echolocating bats use echolocation to navigate and forage, often in total darkness. They generally emerge from their roosts in caves, attics, or trees at dusk and hunt for insects into the night. Using echolocation, bats can determine how far away an object is, the object's size, shape and density, and the direction (if any) that an object is ...

  3. Echolocation jamming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echolocation_jamming

    Bats can make this adjustment very rapidly, often in less than 0.2 seconds. [9] Big brown bats can avoid jamming by going silent for periods of time when following another echolocating big brown bat. [10] This sometimes allows the silent bat to capture a prey in competitive foraging situations.

  4. Discover the World of Bats: 5 Days of Engaging Lesson Plans - AOL

    www.aol.com/discover-world-bats-5-days-150259430...

    The unique use of echolocation to navigate their dark habitats allows bats to detect concealed objects and distinguish prey. Our five-day comprehensive unit plan dives deeper into the magnificent ...

  5. Bechstein's bat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bechstein's_bat

    Bechstein's bat is also recorded to enter artificial nest boxes, but rarely roosts in human buildings. Over the winter, Bechstein's bats hibernate underground and in tree holes. Mating happens in autumn and spring, and delayed fertilization means that young (one per female) are born early in the following summer.

  6. Microbat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microbat

    Bats use echolocation to form images of their surrounding environment and the organisms that inhabit it by eliciting ultrasonic waves via their larynx. [9] [10] The difference between the ultrasonic waves produced by the bat and what the bat hears provides the bat with information about its environment. Echolocation aids the bat in not only ...

  7. Big brown bat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_brown_bat

    Using echolocation, big brown bats can determine how far away an object is, the objects size, shape and density, and the direction (if any) that an object is moving. Their use of echolocation allows them to occupy a niche where there are often many insects (that come out at night since there are fewer predators then), less competition for food ...

  8. Bat detector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bat_detector

    Some bat calls are distinct and easy to recognise such as the horseshoe bats; other calls are less distinct between similar species. While bats can vary their calls as they fly and hunt, the ear can be trained to recognise species according to the frequency ranges and repetition rates of the echolocation calls.

  9. Mexican free-tailed bat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_free-tailed_bat

    On 6 November 2014, Aaron Corcoran, a biologist at Wake Forest University, North Carolina, reported online in Science that his team and he had detected Mexican free-tailed bats emitting ultrasonic vocalizations that had the effect of jamming the echolocation calls of a rival bat species hunting moths. The 'jamming' call led to an increased ...