is bats responsible for ???
Go
Bats
A.
Bats have a problem: how to find
their way around in the dark. They hunt at night, and cannot use light to help
them find prey and avoid obstacles. You might say that this is a problem of
their own making, one that they could avoid simply by changing their habits and
hunting by day. But the daytime economy is already heavily exploited by other
creatures such as birds. Given that there is a living to be made at night, and given that alternative daytime
trades are thoroughly occupied, natural selection has favoured bats that make a
go of the nigh-hunting trade. It is probable that the nocturnal trades go way
back in the ancestry of all mammals. In the time when the dinosaurs dominated
the daytime economy. Our mammalian ancestors probably only managed to survive
at all because they found ways of scraping a living at night. Only after the
mysterious mass extinction of the dinosaurs about 65 million years ago were our
ancestors able to emerge into the daylight in any substantial numbers.
B.
Bats have an engineering problem: how
to find their ways and find their prey in the absence of light. Bats are not
the only creatures to face this difficulty today. Obviously the night-flying
insects that they prey on must find their way about somehow. Deep-sea fish and
whales have little or no light by day or by night. Fish and dolphins that live
in extremely muddy water cannot see because, although there is light, it is
obstructed and scattered by the dirt in the water. Plenty of other modern
animals make their living in conditions where seeing is difficult or
impossible.
C.
Given the questions of how to manoeuvre
in the dark, what solution might an engineer consider? The first one that might
occur to him is to manufacture light, to use a lantern searchlight. Fireflies
and some fish (usually with the help of bacteria) have the power to manufacture
their own light, but the process seems to consume a large amount of energy: a
male’s tiny pinprick of light can be seen by a female from some distance on a
dark night, since her eyes are exposed directly to the light source itself.
However, using light to find one’s own way around requires vastly more energy,
since the eyes have to detect the tiny fraction of the light that bounces off
each part of the scene. The light source must therefore be immensely brighter
if it is to be used as a headlight to illuminate the path, than if it is to be
used as signal to others. In any event, whether or not the reason is the energyexpense, it seems to be the case that, with the possible exception of some
weird deep-sea fish, no animal apart from man uses manufactured light to find
its way about.
D.
What else might the engineer think
of? Well, blind humans sometimes seem to have an uncanny sense of obstacles in
their path. It has been given the name ‘facial vision’, because blind people have
reported that it feels a bit like the sense of touch, on the face. One report
tells of totally blind boy who could ride his tricycle at good speed around the
block near his home, using facial vision. Experiments showed that, in fact,
facial vision nothing to do with touch or the front of the face, although the
sensation may be referred to the front of the face, like the referred pain in a
phantom limb. The sensation of the facial vision, it turns out, really goes in
through the ears. Blind people, without even being aware of the fact, are
actually echoes of their own footsteps and of other sounds, to sense the
presence of obstacles. Before this was discovered, engineers had already built
instruments to exploit the principle, for example to measure the depth of the
sea under a ship. After this technique had been invented, it was only a matter
of time before weapons designers adapted it for the detection of submarines. Both
sides in the Second World War relied heavily on these devices, under such
codenames as Asdic (British) and Sonar (American), as well as Radar (American)
or RDF (British). Which use radio echoes rather than sound echoes.
E.
The Sonar and Radar pioneers didn’t know
it then, but all the world now knows that bats , or rather natural selection
working on bats, had perfect the system tens of millions of years earlier, and
their radar’ achieves feats of detection and navigation that would strike an
engineer dumb with admiration. It is technically incorrect to talk about bat ‘radar’,
since they do not use radio waves. It is sonar. But the underlying mathematical
theories of radar and sonar are very similar: and much of our scientific
understanding of the details of what bats are doing has come from applying
radar theory to them. The American zoologist Donald Griffin, who was largely
responsible for the discovery of sonar in bats, coined the term ‘echolocation’
to cover both sonar and radar, whether used by animals or human instruments.
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