Ultrasonic frequencies
Bat calls range from 20 kHz to 200 kHz - well above the human hearing limit of 20 kHz.
Animal Behavior
A bat flying in total darkness can detect a wire 0.3 millimeters thick, track a moth flying erratically at full speed, and navigate a cluttered forest - all while calling out at 120 decibels, louder than a smoke alarm right next to your ear. How does an animal 'see' the world through sound with more precision than the best radar systems? Imagine your entire world as a real-time 3D sculpture built from reflected sound waves - every object, surface, and moving insect revealed by the echoes that bounce back to your ears in a fraction of a millisecond.
Echolocation is biological sonar: bats emit rapid pulses of ultrasonic sound (mostly 20-200 kHz, far above human hearing) from their larynx or nose, and listen to the echoes that bounce back from objects. The time delay between emission and echo tells the bat how far away an object is; differences in arrival time between left and right ears give direction; Doppler shifts in frequency reveal whether a target is moving toward or away; and the echo's intensity and spectral pattern reveal size, texture, and shape. Just before calling, the bat's middle-ear muscles contract to prevent self-deafening.

Ultrasonic frequencies
Bat calls range from 20 kHz to 200 kHz - well above the human hearing limit of 20 kHz.
Call intensity
Some bat calls reach 120 decibels - louder than a rock concert - yet they don't deafen themselves.
Terminal buzz
Just before catching prey, bats fire up to 200 calls per second - an acoustic blur for centimeter-precise targeting.
Myth: Bats are blind
All bat species have functional eyes. Many use vision extensively; echolocation supplements vision in darkness.
Myth: All bats echolocate
Old World fruit bats (family Pteropodidae) mostly lack laryngeal echolocation; they rely on vision.
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