Bats use echolocation for orientation. They emit ultrasonic sounds, which hit potential prey nearby, sending an echo back to the bat.
From this echo the flying mammals can define where the prey is and attack it.
The study has examined how hunting bats react when approaching their prey.
It concludes that bats are capable of gathering information from the environment and process it surprisingly fast in order to determine how to carry out the attack or maybe call it off.
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"It is surprising that they are so fast. Until now we thought that bats are deploying a kind of autopilot in the last phase of an attack limiting them to an unchangeable behavioural pattern," Brinklov said.
The team including Professor Annemarie Surlykke from University of Southern Denmark and colleagues from the Ludwig-Maximilian University in Munich, studied hunting bats both in the laboratory and in nature.
In both the bat laboratory and in nature, the researchers offered prey to the bats.
The researchers recorded the sound emitted from the bats and filmed how and when the bats responded to the disappearance of the prey.
"As the bats approached their prey, they were continually able to adjust their attack and maybe call off the hunt entirely if we took away the prey. They had this capability until less than 100 milliseconds before reaching their prey. This tells us that bats can process complex information and make decisions in an extremely short time," said Brinklov.
"Sometimes we also see reaction times of only 20 milliseconds in bats, for instance in response to loud sounds, but that is a simple reflex reaction that does not require brain work," said Brinklov.
Brinklov thinks that bats' ability to make quick decisions is a result of evolution.
"They rely on being able to react extremely quickly when they hunt, so I would think that they've been under strong evolutionary pressure to develop such expedited reactions in order to survive as a species," Brinklov added.
The study was published in the journal PNAS.