Bats sing love ballads while mating
August 26th, 2009 - 12:37 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Aug 26 (ANI): It’s not just humans who sing love ballads to woo their partners, for bats too sing when they indulge in sex, according to a new study.
Researchers at Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin are believed to be the first to decode the mysterious love sounds made by the winged creatures.
Kirsten Bohn and Mike Smotherman spent three years analysing thousands of Brazilian free-tailed (also known as Mexican free-tailed) bat recordings to understand their meanings.
They determined that male bats had very distinguishable syllables and phrases that they used as love songs to attract females, and, in some cases, to warn other males to stay away.
Their love songs apparently work well, and are Top Twenty material in the bat world because there are lots of bats out there.
The Austin locations used in the recordings contain up to 1 million bats, while an estimated 100,000 to 250,000 bats are believed to be winging their way around Kyle Field, home of the Texas Aggie football team, and the surrounding athletic complex area where the bat sounds were captured on tape.
“The sounds they make are very difficult for the human ear to pick up,” explained Bohn.
“They are at a very high frequency range, but our recording equipment could track them very well. The sounds are made in a specific, arranged pattern to form a song, and there are actually organized sequences within each phrase. They are made to attract and lure nearby females.
“We compared the recordings made by bats in Austin to those at Kyle Field, and we discovered they were almost exactly the same - the bats in both places use the same ‘words’ in their love phrases,” she added.
She revealed that the team found several types of syllables, each one an individual sound.
Syllables are combined in specific ways to make three types of phrases - a chirp, a buzz or a trill.
Males use different combinations of the three sound during the mating process.
Bohn said that the results were surprising because in general terms, mammals such as bats don’t have “language rules” - the use of specific sequence of phrases and a complex means of communication to others in their species.
“With the possible exception of whales, you normally don’t have this type of communication technique. You see it frequently in birds, but that’s about it. We’ve learned the vocal production of bats is very specific and patterned, and now we have a model not only to study communication similarities in other animals, but also human speech. We think this is a big first step,” she added.
The study has been published in PloS One. (ANI)
- Brain cells wired for team work - Nov 04, 2011
- Songbirds' songs 'may shed light on how humans learn language and speech' - Nov 09, 2010
- Male mice drive females wild with ultrasonic love ballads - Mar 06, 2010
- 'Lingodroid' robots invent language to chat - May 25, 2011
- Bat brain mysteries may hold potential cure for human speech disorders - Nov 14, 2007
- Tiny male mice sing songs to impress females - Jan 29, 2012
- Earliest American residents came at least 15,500 years ago - Mar 25, 2011
- Human enzyme holds promise of weight loss - Nov 15, 2011
- How songbirds' strategy could shed light on helping rehab patients - Feb 01, 2011
- Shrimps 'rumble' to keep predators at bay - Sep 09, 2011
- Female crickets fall for louder songs sung by younger males - Jan 15, 2011
- Male peacock's tail plumage and eyespots attract females for mating - Apr 28, 2011
- Practicing before females improves males' performance - Feb 26, 2011
- Blind can develop bat-like sonar to see - May 26, 2011
- Sparrows twittering louder to be heard - Apr 03, 2012
Tags: bat world, bohn, frequency range, human ear, kyle field, love ballads, love phrases, love songs, m university, male bats, mexican free tailed bat, sound syllables, spent three, study researchers, texas aggie football, texas aggie football team, trill, university of texas at austin, very high frequency, winged creatures