Sonar.
no bats don't see. they use sound and when the vibrations of the noise jump off an object then the bats know to avoid it.
Bats can't see very well, they use sonar
no not all bats are blind ... .... .... new answer .... OK no all bats are able to see the reason they use sonar is because that they see the same way humans do... they use cones and rods in their eyes, which can't see at night, so there fore... bats are not blind they are more able to see than we are. They are just nocturnal so that they are only out during the night. And thus bats cant see at night even though they can see perfectly normal.No they are not blind, but they have little need to use their eyes to know where to fly. Bats can 'hear' their surroundings by sonar and therefore can 'see' at night.
No, bats cannot see in infrared. They use echolocation - emitting sounds and analyzing the echoes that bounce back - to navigate in the dark.
kinda they use their eyes a bit for hunting but mostly they "see" with their ears.
they both use ecolocation to see and hear
Well bats use echo waves. These waves help them to know where everything is because bats are blind. See if you where standing there he would know your there with Eco waves with out actually seeing you
Yes, bats can sense obstacles. Bats use echolocation to hear and see at night. When the vibrations bounce back, a bat can sense if there are things in the way.
sharks cant see underwter however, sharks use this kind of sound wave to see just like bats. they have to be able to see under water.
Bats do not have night vision; they see very poorly at night and not all that well during the day, either. Those species of bats that eat insects use sonar to locate the insects, rather than vision.
Bats use their eyesight to see things (yes, bats are not blind, this is a myth) They also use echolocation sending out sounds and bouncing them back to judge distances and size of objects.
Bats primarily use echolocation, emitting high-frequency sound waves that bounce off objects in their surroundings. They then detect the returning echoes to navigate and locate prey in the dark. This ability helps them "see" in the dark and hunt for insects at night.