Male Bats Bust Out Complex Serenades To Woo The Ladies

Tuesday, July 23, 2013 - 14:00 in Biology & Nature

Love Bats USFWS/Ann Froschauer via Flickr They have a window of less than a second to attract a mate as she flies by. Though whales, gibbons and even mice can produce songs, mammals typically aren't capable of altering their song composition and structure in the way that songbirds can. Bats seem to be the exception to this rule, producing variable songs that sound a whole lot like birdsongs. The nocturnal mammals, notorious for relying on their ears rather than their eyes, use singing to attract mates, rather than the visual cues typical of other animals, like brightly colored feathers. Over a period of three years, Texas A&M biology professor Mike Smotherman recorded the calls and songs of the thousands of free-tailed bats roosting in the university's football stadium. He found that male bats can be pretty creative when it comes to their serenades, creating different singing styles. The seductive croons of free-tailed...

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