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Batty for Bats


Not many people think about what it's like to be a bat, but for those who do, it's enlightening and potentially groundbreaking for understanding aspects of the human brain and nervous system. Cynthia Moss, a member of the Neuroscience and Cognitive Science program at the University of Maryland in College Park is one of a small number of researchers who spend time trying to get into the heads of bats. Learn more in this podcast and news release.
Credit: Jessica Nelson

These creatures of the night could be the models for future aircraft!

"If you just watch them in the sky, they can fly like nothing else. A bat can make a 180 degree turn at full tilt in three wing beats and go back the other way ... it's a pretty amazing creature." ~ Kenny Breuer, Brown University

"Amazingly, there are 5,000 species of mammals alive at present, and nearly a quarter of them are bats. They're found on nearly every terrestrial location on Earth. Bats represent a huge piece of the story of mammalian evolution." ~ Sharon Swartz, Biologist, Brown University

Whether they are in your belfry or not, bats get a bad rap. Actually, up close, bats are kind of cute. They are mammals, not birds, and, according to Brown University biologist Sharon Swartz, bats make up almost a quarter of all mammal species. In fact, bats are the only mammals that can fly under their own power!

"There are bats that eat nothing but fruit, for example, and there are bats that eat nothing but insects. From the perspective of flight, these two kinds of foods couldn't be more different," says Swartz. "It's really a fundamentally different task to fly after a large, heavy, stationary piece of fruit than to fly after a tiny, highly mobile, evasive insect prey. For us as flight biologists, we're really interested in understanding how those two different kinds of bats might be designed differently."

Since 2001, Swartz has teamed up with Brown University engineer Kenny Breuer to study the mechanics of bat flight. With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the two scientists from very different disciplines set up a special facility, including a wind tunnel, to study bats in flight.

"We take high-speed video of bats from multiple angles," Breuer explains, pointing to a computer screen which shows a bat flying in slow motion. "We also take high-speed video of the velocity field behind the bat using a technique called particle image velocimetry or PIV, and we synchronize these two things together to measure how the wings move and the kinds of patterns the wings generate in the wake behind the bat so we can understand how bats generate their lift forces, their thrust forces; what they do in order to maneuver and to fly."

Unlike birds and insects, bats' wings are shaped like a human hand and covered with skin. So they grasp the air in flight and the skin stretches like a sail in a breeze.

"They can bend all their joints and they can move their fingers to change the shape of the wing during flight," says Breuer. "That's something birds don't have."

Swartz holds a bat in her gloved hand and spreads its wing pointing to the thin bones that connect the thin skin spanning the wing. "You can see the thumb, the second, third, forth and fifth fingers. This skin is stretchy and embedded within this skin are special muscles that allow it to use its wing in a way that would be impossible for any other flying animal."

Imagine designing aircraft with this dexterity. That's what this research could lead to and what scientists expect will happen one day. In the meantime, these two researchers will continue to study as many species as time will allow.

"I did not grow up loving bats," notes Swartz with a smile, "but for 20 years now, I've come to see the incredible beauty in their bodies, wings and faces. The more I study them, the more incredible things I learn."

With so many bat species, nearly 1,200 in all, studying each one could drive anyone batty, but not these two. Swartz and Breuer say they're perfectly happy in their bat cave!

Miles O'Brien, Science Nation Correspondent
Ann Kellan, Science Nation Producer


Related Multimedia
portrait of a white fruit bat
Flight biologists, Sharon Swartz and her colleagues are interested in understanding the wing designs of various species of bats and how they differ in pursuing prey. Shown here is a portrait of a white fruit bat (Ectophylla alba).
Image Credit: © Merlin D. Tuttle, Bat Conservation International
infrared image of Brazilian free-tailed bats
Biologists and atmospheric scientists are engaged in the study of aeroecology: how and why airborne organisms such as bats, birds, arthropods and microbes depend on the support of the atmosphere closest to Earth's surface. Learn more in thisDiscovery.
Credit: Thomas Kunz, Boston University
Brazilian free-tailed bats
Each night, more than 100 million free-tailed bats disperse from caves and bridges in south-central Texas to forage for food. They ingest enormous quantities of insects and pests. If farmers can determine how bats impact pests, the number of pesticide applications could be reduced. Thomas Kunz, a professor at the Center for Ecology and Conservation Biology at Boston University, and his colleagues figured out a way to quantify the value of bat services in Texas. Learn more in this Discovery and podcast.
Credit: Thomas Kunz, Boston University
a bat pursuing a moth
Bats' vocal sonar does more than locate objects; it cues memory and assists flight. Learn more in thispodcast and news release.
Credit: Jessica Nelson
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