New research from the University
of Washington suggests that the Egyptian fruit bat is using similar techniques
to those preferred by modern-day military and civil surveillance. The results
could inspire new directions for driverless cars and drones.
The new open-access paper
in PLoS Biology shows how the animals are able to navigate using a
different system from other bats.
"Before people thought that
this bat was not really good at echolocation, and just made these simple
clicks," said lead author Wu-Jung Lee, a researcher at the UW's Applied
Physics Laboratory. "But this bat species is actually very special—it may
be using a similar technique that engineers have perfected for sensing
remotely."
While most other bats emit
high-pitched squeals, the fruit bat simply clicks its tongue and produces
signals that are more like dolphin clicks than other bats' calls. Fruit bats
can also see quite well, and the animals switch and combine sensory modes
between bright and dark environments.
An earlier study showed that
Egyptian fruit
bats send
clicks in different directions without moving their head or mouth, and
suggested that the animals can perform echolocation, the form of navigation
that uses sound, better
than previously suspected.
"But no one knew how they do
it, and that's when I got excited, because there's something going on that we
don't understand," Lee said.
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