By the time a Japanese pipistrelle bat (shown here) has finished foraging for the night, it has eaten up to 20% of its body mass in bugs and flies. Such prodigious feeding is necessary because foraging itself is energy intensive. Some bats spend two-thirds of their daily energy budget on the activity. Efficient foraging is therefore paramount. Emyo Fujioka of Doshisha University in Kyoto, Japan, and his collaborators have set themselves a goal of determining how the Japanese pipistrelle maximizes its food intake. Their principal tool is an array of 32 microphones positioned around a stream where local bats habitually forage. By analyzing the ultrasonic chirps emitted by the bats, the researchers can track not only the bats’ flight paths but also the directions in which the bats aimed the chirps to echolocate their prey. What’s more, because the chirps become more frequent the closer a bat gets to...
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1 June 2016
June 01 2016
Citation
Charles Day; How bats optimize foraging. Physics Today 1 June 2016; 69 (6): 23. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.3190
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