Echolocation

Published: June 21, 2018, 10:44 a.m.

b'

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss how some bats, dolphins and other animals emit sounds at high frequencies to explore their environments, rather than sight. This was such an unlikely possibility, to natural historians from C18th onwards, that discoveries were met with disbelief even into the C20th; it was assumed that bats found their way in the dark by touch. Not all bats use echolocation, but those that do have a range of frequencies for different purposes and techniques for preventing themselves becoming deafened by their own sounds. Some prey have evolved ways of detecting when bats are emitting high frequencies in their direction, and some fish have adapted to detect the sounds dolphins use to find them.

With

Kate Jones\\nProfessor of Ecology and Biodiversity at University College London

Gareth Jones\\nProfessor of Biological Sciences at the University of Bristol

And

Dean Waters\\nLecturer in the Environment Department at the University of York

Producer: Simon Tillotson.

'