Loud noises don’t bother bats

Individual bats emit up to 100 to 110 decibels in sound pressure. The combined level of sound pressure among bats flying in groups can increase to 140 decibels, and it can last for several hours, which is comparable to the ambient sound on the deck of an active aircraft carrier. (Credit: Jay Roc/Flickr)

At some time or another—perhaps at a loud concert or a construction site—we have all “lost our hearing,” which becomes strikingly evident after the loud noise subsides.

That phenomenon, called a “temporary threshold shift” (TTS) is the norm among a wide variety of animals, but not for bats. The company of other bats surrounds them with a cloud of incredibly intense sound, but their hearing doesn’t suffer any significant sensitivity loss from their experience.

little brown bat
(Credit: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Headquarters/Flickr)

“They are naturally exposed to continuous intense sound levels from their own and neighboring sonar emissions while foraging, orienting, and emerging from their roosts,” write the authors of a new study published in the Journal of Experimental Biology. “For bats, exposure to prolonged intense wideband sound is an occupational hazard.”

Individual bats emit up to 100 to 110 decibels in sound pressure. The combined level of sound pressure among bats flying in groups can increase to 140 decibels, and it can last for several hours, which is comparable to the ambient sound on the deck of an active aircraft carrier.

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“This would be like a pounding to a human,” says study coauthor Kelsey Hom, who graduated from Brown University in 2015 and has stayed on as lab manager. One day in a class, Hom asked senior author Andrea Simmons, professor of cognitive, linguistic, and psychological sciences and of neuroscience, whether bats experience the same TTS that other animals do. But Simmons didn’t have an answer.

So they decided to test the hypothesis that bats—in this case big brown bats from Rhode Island—have evolved some way of remaining resilient to their noisy circumstances.

The researchers caught wild bats and brought them to the lab for a set of experiments. First they trained the bats with extra food rewards to move toward a natural spectrum of bat sound played from a lab speaker if they heard it.

Then, they used the bats’ newfound skill to test their baseline hearing sensitivity—how quiet a sound could still reliably induce the bat to move toward it. Next, they exposed some bats to the prolonged loudness and range of frequencies they would hear in normal bat life. Other bats were left unexposed to the cacophony as experimental controls. Finally they re-measured the bats’ hearing sensitivity again 20 minutes, 2 hours and 24 hours later.

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The results showed that unlike in people, fish, birds, rodents, and other animals, the bats’ hearing sensitivity barely changed. One bat for one timeframe lost about 5 decibels of sensitivity, but on average across seven bats, the total loss was only about 0.6 decibels 20 minutes after exposure. After 24 hours their sensitivity actually improved a similarly insignificant 1.7 decibels. Bats in the control group, who weren’t exposed to prolonged loud noise, showed just about as much variation.

“In the literature, the definition of TTS is 6 decibels and above,” Andrea Simmons says.

The study documents the natural resiliency of bats’ hearing, but it doesn’t explain it.

“We hypothesize that the bat’s inner ear may have some special adaptations that allow it to protect itself from loud noises,” Simmons says. The team is eager to learn how bats resist being deafened temporarily, not only for the sake of better understanding bat biology and behavior, but also because it may provide the inspiration to design devices or implants that can help people better weather exposure to loud noises.

“Bats have always been looked at as a model for sonar, with the goal of technological development, but these data suggest that they could be looked at as a biomedically related model as well,” Simmons says.

The Office of Naval Research, the Capita Foundation, and Brown University funded the research.

Source: Brown University