Science And Sciencibility

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Tuesday, 1 February 2022

How a disappearing ear bone turned bats into masters of echolocation

Some bats have an anatomical quirk in their ears that could explain how they evolved to hunt in specialized ways, from sensing small fish to catching insects midflight. In 2015, researchers took 3D images of the inner ear of a bat skull but couldn’t find a feature shared by almost all mammals: a bony tube that connects the ear to the brain and encases nerve cells. A more thorough search revealed many more bat species in which this bony nerve channel was missing or poked with large holes. Researchers suspect the loss of this bony channel gave the bats new hearing capabilities because the nerves are less confined.

Posted by Dr CLÉiRIGh at 00:00
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Labels: Biology, Semiosis
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