One is a dolphin. Whales also I think.
Bats, dolphins, Whales, shrews, flying squirrels use echolocation.
Echolocation
Echolocation :)
A useful echo is echolocation, which is used by marine animals such as dolphins to locate and then hunt their prey
Several types of animals use echolocation, including but not limited to: Dolphins Shrews Most bats and most whales. Also, two bird groups use their echolocation to navigate through caves. Echolocation is used by animals who usually can't see very well, or they live in an environment that is hard to see in the first place. (For example, the oceans.) They use it to call out, and the echoes of the calls are used to navigate around in their environment. It's also used to hunt as well as navigate.
Boris Fedorovich Sergeev has written: 'Paradoksy mozga' 'Zhivye lokatory okeana' -- subject(s): Behavior, Cetacea, Echolocation (Physiology), Mammals, Marine animals, Physiology 'The living sonars of the ocean' -- subject(s): Behavior, Cetacea, Echolocation (Physiology), Mammals, Marine animals, Physiology 'The world of the amphibians' -- subject(s): Amphibians
Bats use echolocation to navigate and locate prey in the dark.
"Bats use echolocation to move around." Is a sentence using echolocation
"many animals use echolocation like whales bats etc.they send it by using ultrasonic waves (through water). the ultra sonic waves reach the object and bounce back to the whale or dolphin!
I'm sorry, but this question doesn't make sense. Echolocation is useful for the animals that can use it. It is used for orientation, obstacle avoidance, hunting, communication. Bats, dolphins, and some shrews, rodents and birds are all animals that can use echolocation.
Echolocation is when an animal produces a sound and it bounces off things and comes back to the animal. Most bats, dolphins and whales use this. They use it to tell where they are because their eyesight isn't as good as their hearing. Lots of animals then use it. In a simpler form, Animals that cannot see as well as they can hear use it or if they are in the dark.
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.