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  2. Animal echolocation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_echolocation

    Echolocating bats use echolocation to navigate and forage, often in total darkness. They generally emerge from their roosts in caves, attics, or trees at dusk and hunt for insects into the night. Using echolocation, bats can determine how far away an object is, the object's size, shape and density, and the direction (if any) that an object is ...

  3. Electroreception and electrogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroreception_and...

    Electroreceptive animals use the sense to locate objects around them. This is important in ecological niches where the animal cannot depend on vision: for example in caves, in murky water, and at night. Electrolocation can be passive, sensing electric fields such as those generated by the muscle movements of buried prey, or active, the ...

  4. Echolocation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echolocation

    Animal echolocation, non-human animals emitting sound waves and listening to the echo in order to locate objects or navigate. Human echolocation , the use of sound by people to navigate. Sonar ( so und n avigation a nd r anging), the use of sound on water or underwater, to navigate or to locate other watercraft, usually by submarines.

  5. Echolocation jamming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echolocation_jamming

    The moth Bertholdia trigona is one of several moth species known to jam the echolocation of its predator. Many tiger moths produce ultrasonic clicks in response to the echolocation calls bats use while attacking prey. [11] For most species of tiger moth these clicks warn bats that the moths have toxic compounds that make them distasteful. [12]

  6. Category:Animals that use echolocation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Animals_that_use...

    Pages in category "Animals that use echolocation" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.

  7. Sirenia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sirenia

    Macrovibrissae are used to detect food by its size and microvibrissae to manipulate food. They can be used to break off leaves and undesirable parts while feeding. Sirenians use their elaborate facial musculature along with perioral bristles to acquire, manipulate, and ingest aquatic vegetation.

  8. Animal communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_communication

    Food-related signals Many animals make "food calls" to attract a mate, offspring, or other members of a social group to a food source. Perhaps the most elaborate food-related signal is the Waggle dance of honeybees studied by Karl von Frisch. One well-known example of begging of offspring in a clutch or litter is altricial songbirds. Young ...

  9. Melon (cetacean) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melon_(cetacean)

    The melon is structurally part of the nasal apparatus and comprises most of the mass tissue between the blowhole and the tip of the snout. The function of the melon is not completely understood, but scientists believe it is a bioacoustic component, providing a means of focusing sounds used in echolocation and creating a similarity between characteristics of its tissue and the surrounding water ...