1 00:00:02,040 --> 00:00:06,760 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain stuff from how stuff works. Hey, their 2 00:00:06,760 --> 00:00:09,840 Speaker 1: brain stuff Lauren Vogel bomb here. All creatures living in 3 00:00:09,840 --> 00:00:12,240 Speaker 1: the wild will try to gain an advantage when it 4 00:00:12,280 --> 00:00:15,120 Speaker 1: comes to finding their next meal. Some animals will use 5 00:00:15,160 --> 00:00:17,919 Speaker 1: their size big or small, while others rely on speed 6 00:00:18,079 --> 00:00:20,560 Speaker 1: or the ability to make a threatening sound. But the 7 00:00:20,640 --> 00:00:22,960 Speaker 1: bat has a different kind of trick up its sleeve 8 00:00:23,200 --> 00:00:27,840 Speaker 1: or wing signal jamming. That's are nocturnal hunting mainly in 9 00:00:27,880 --> 00:00:31,160 Speaker 1: the darkness of night. They eat prey that's tiny and quiet, 10 00:00:31,240 --> 00:00:33,600 Speaker 1: like moths and other insects, which can be difficult to 11 00:00:33,600 --> 00:00:36,800 Speaker 1: find in low light and darkness. Although the expression blind 12 00:00:36,920 --> 00:00:39,519 Speaker 1: is a bat is widely used, bats are not blind. 13 00:00:39,760 --> 00:00:42,400 Speaker 1: They just use a means of locating these tiny tidbits 14 00:00:42,400 --> 00:00:45,800 Speaker 1: of dinner other than sight. When it's time to find food, 15 00:00:45,880 --> 00:00:48,440 Speaker 1: bats emit a series of high pitched sounds into the 16 00:00:48,520 --> 00:00:51,360 Speaker 1: darkness that bounce back when they hit an object. When 17 00:00:51,400 --> 00:00:53,960 Speaker 1: a bat hears the echoing sound, it knows an object 18 00:00:54,000 --> 00:00:56,320 Speaker 1: is nearby, and it flies closer to the source of 19 00:00:56,320 --> 00:00:58,840 Speaker 1: the echo to send out more signals. As the echo 20 00:00:58,920 --> 00:01:01,880 Speaker 1: back sound increase as an intensity, the bat knows it's 21 00:01:01,880 --> 00:01:04,520 Speaker 1: getting closer to the prey, and it keeps up this 22 00:01:04,560 --> 00:01:08,440 Speaker 1: echolocation until it can swoop in for the kill. While 23 00:01:08,440 --> 00:01:11,280 Speaker 1: primarily using sonar to find food, it turns out the 24 00:01:11,280 --> 00:01:13,720 Speaker 1: bats can also use their sonar in a hostile and 25 00:01:13,840 --> 00:01:18,080 Speaker 1: competitive way. Wake Forest University researcher William Connor and his 26 00:01:18,160 --> 00:01:21,880 Speaker 1: University of Maryland colleague Aaron Corcoran used audio and video 27 00:01:21,920 --> 00:01:25,160 Speaker 1: systems to observe the behavior of Mexican freetailed bats as 28 00:01:25,160 --> 00:01:28,520 Speaker 1: they hunted for tiger moths, a favorite snack, but favorite 29 00:01:28,520 --> 00:01:31,039 Speaker 1: snack of the bats not the researchers. They found that 30 00:01:31,080 --> 00:01:33,920 Speaker 1: the bats emitted a specific sound that was successful in 31 00:01:33,920 --> 00:01:36,720 Speaker 1: interfering with the sonar of other prey seeking bats of 32 00:01:36,760 --> 00:01:40,560 Speaker 1: the same species. They called this process sweep jamming. The 33 00:01:40,600 --> 00:01:44,320 Speaker 1: study concludes that bats admit this sound intentionally to interfere 34 00:01:44,319 --> 00:01:48,320 Speaker 1: with the sonar of food seeking competitors. When the researchers 35 00:01:48,320 --> 00:01:51,200 Speaker 1: played back recordings of this jamming sound to other bats 36 00:01:51,200 --> 00:01:54,080 Speaker 1: in search of insects, those bats were also thrown off track. 37 00:01:54,600 --> 00:01:57,720 Speaker 1: The sound made the bats sent more likely to miss 38 00:01:57,760 --> 00:02:00,880 Speaker 1: their prey target. The scientists expire rented with other sounds, 39 00:02:00,880 --> 00:02:03,480 Speaker 1: like white noise, but those did not interfere with the 40 00:02:03,520 --> 00:02:07,800 Speaker 1: bats sonar. In the natural world, sonar and echolocation aren't 41 00:02:07,840 --> 00:02:10,919 Speaker 1: exclusive to bats. Mammals such as dolphins and other toothed 42 00:02:10,919 --> 00:02:13,720 Speaker 1: whales also use it to find their way, and humans 43 00:02:13,760 --> 00:02:17,359 Speaker 1: too have adapted technology to mimic this process. Ships regularly 44 00:02:17,440 --> 00:02:19,760 Speaker 1: use sonar to help them navigate and to explore what's 45 00:02:19,800 --> 00:02:22,840 Speaker 1: in the water under and around them. Sonar can indicate 46 00:02:22,840 --> 00:02:25,920 Speaker 1: the presence of another ship, a dangerous obstacle, or aquatic life. 47 00:02:26,280 --> 00:02:28,720 Speaker 1: In warfare, sonar can be life saving, cluing a ship 48 00:02:28,760 --> 00:02:30,800 Speaker 1: in about the presence of a hostile submarine or an 49 00:02:30,880 --> 00:02:34,800 Speaker 1: enemy torpedo. Technology can even jam the sonar of other ships, 50 00:02:34,800 --> 00:02:38,120 Speaker 1: just like bats. There's no evidence yet that other animals 51 00:02:38,120 --> 00:02:42,000 Speaker 1: that use echolocation for hunting employ signal jamming, but bats 52 00:02:42,040 --> 00:02:45,160 Speaker 1: seem to have perfected the process of jamming one another signals, 53 00:02:45,200 --> 00:02:52,560 Speaker 1: all in the search for a better meal. Today's episode 54 00:02:52,560 --> 00:02:55,240 Speaker 1: was written by Debbie Swanson and produced by Tristan McNeil. 55 00:02:55,600 --> 00:02:57,320 Speaker 1: For more on this and lots of other jam and 56 00:02:57,400 --> 00:03:11,399 Speaker 1: topics are visit our own planet how Stuff Works dot com. 57 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:11,880 Speaker 1: M HM