Why Bats Hate Rain

Publish date: 2022-03-06

Bats hate rain. They tend to stay out of it. Why?

First off, there's evidence that raindrops refract the sound waves bats emit and receive, confounding their ability to navigate by echolocation. Now, new research detailed in the latest issue of the journal Biology Letters has found another reason for their hatred of a rainy evening.

Christian Voigt and his colleagues at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Germany have discovered that wet bats must expend twice as much energy as dry ones to stay aloft. While dry bats burn 10 times more fuel during flight than they do at rest, wet bats burn 20 times more fuel.

It isn't because of the extra water weight, as you might suspect: The researchers measured only a negligible weight difference between dry and wet bats. They've presented two alternative explanations for the doubled energy expenditure. First, it could be that water makes bats cold, causing their metabolisms to ramp up to keep their bodies warm. Another possibility is that bats' fur they're the only furry animals that fly clumps together when it's wet, making them less aerodynamic.

Further research is necessary to determine which explanation is correct. One thing is clear: With echolocation gone batty , and fuel use doubled, it's no surprise that bats hate rain.

Follow Natalie Wolchover on Twitter @nattyover.

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