Yes. Bats use echolocation when they must find their prey in the dark, and it greatly helps them because there are many species of animals that bats eat that only come out at night.
Bats use echolocation to determine where they are going.
bats use echolocation to 'see'. echolocation is when sound waves bounce off an object and back to the bat. the bat then can feel the size, the shape, and even the movement of other predators, prey, each other, and objects
Because they mostly fly at night. They use echolocation to find obstacles and prey. They use those big ears in the echolocation.
They use echolocation (a form of ultrasonic ranging) to locate their food.
They use sonar and hear very well using echolocation .
Bats use echolocation to identify objects and where it is.
Echolocation is when you use sound to locate where something is. Bats use it.
Yes, mega-bats use echolocation
Bats use echolocation.
"Bats use echolocation to move around." Is a sentence using echolocation
Bats, dolphins, Whales, shrews, flying squirrels use echolocation.
echolocation is not to communicate it is to find food or to sense danger
Dolphins use echolocation to communicate with each other. Bats use it so they dont fly into things like trees. Boats and submarines use it to locate where each other are so they can fire bombs at one another.
They use echolocation to hunt for their food dur
Bats do, birds do not
all of them
Bats use echolocation. Blind people can also use echolocation.