echolocation$23735$ - meaning and definition. What is echolocation$23735$
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What (who) is echolocation$23735$ - definition

METHOD USED BY SOME ANIMALS TO DETERMINE THE LOCATION OF SOMETHING BY MEASURING THE TIME IT TAKES FOR AN ECHO TO RETURN FROM IT
Animal Echolocation; Biosonar; Echolocation (animal); Bat navigation; Terminal buzz
  • A depiction of the ultrasound signals emitted by a bat, and the echo from a nearby object
  • textcolor=white}}
  • Audio recording: Common pipistrelle approaching prey, 20 fold dilated
  • Audio recording: Common pipistrelle approaching prey, 20 fold dilated]]
  • Southern resident [[killer whale]]s using echolocation
  • A Palawan swiftlet (''Aerodramus palawanensis'') flies in complete darkness inside the Puerto Princesa subterranean river cave.
  • Diagram illustrating sound generation, propagation and reception in a toothed whale. Outgoing sounds are cyan and incoming ones are green.
  • Echolocation call produced by ''[[Pipistrellus pipistrellus]]'', an FM bat. The ultrasonic call has been "[[heterodyne]]d" – multiplied by a constant frequency to produce frequency subtraction, and thus an audible sound – by a bat detector. A key feature of the recording is the increase in the repetition rate of the call as the bat nears its target – this is called the "terminal buzz".

Echolocation jamming         
  • The moth ''Bertholdia trigona'' is the only animal in nature known to jam the echolocation of its predator
Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Echolocation Jamming; Echolocation jamming in Animals; Echolocation jamming in animals
Echolocation (or sonar) systems of animals, like human radar systems, are susceptible to interference known as echolocation jamming or sonar jamming. Jamming occurs when non-target sounds interfere with target echoes.
echolocation         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Echo-location; Echo location; Echo- location; Echolocate; Echolocating; Echolocation (disambiguation); Ecolocation; Echo-locate
also echo-location
Echolocation is a system used by some animals to determine the position of an object by measuring how long it takes for an echo to return from the object. (TECHNICAL)
Most bats navigate by echolocation.
N-UNCOUNT
echo-location         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Echo-location; Echo location; Echo- location; Echolocate; Echolocating; Echolocation (disambiguation); Ecolocation; Echo-locate

Wikipedia

Animal echolocation

Echolocation, also called bio sonar, is a biological sonar used by several animal species. Echolocating animals emit calls out to the environment and listen to the echoes of those calls that return from various objects near them. They use these echoes to locate and identify the objects. Echolocation is used for navigation, foraging, and hunting in various environments.

Echolocating animals include mammals, most notably Laurasiatheria, especially odontocetes (toothed whales) and some bat species, and also, using simpler forms, species in other groups such as shrews. A few bird species also echolocate, including two cave-dwelling bird groups, the so-called cave swiftlets in the genus Aerodramus (formerly Collocalia) and the unrelated oilbird Steatornis caripensis.