There are more than 1,000 species of these echo-locating night creatures, compared with just 80 species of non-echolocating nocturnal birds, researchers said.
While it seems that echolocation works together with normal vision to give bats an evolutionary edge, nobody knows exactly how.
Now Dr Arjan Boonman and Dr Yossi Yovel of Tel Aviv University's Department of Zoology suggest that bats use vision to keep track of where they're going and echolocation to hunt tiny insects that most nocturnal predators can't see.
Bats do most of their feeding at dusk, when insects are most active and there is still plenty of light. Under these conditions, vision seems a better option than echolocation - it conveys more information, and more quickly, at a higher resolution.
The researchers wondered: If bats evolved vision before echolocation, as scientists believe, why did echolocation ever come along.
The team set out to answer this question by comparing the distances at which the two senses can detect small objects.
Vision is hard to simulate, so, extrapolating from the findings of two previous studies, the researchers calculated the distance at which bats would be able to see the same insects in medium to low light.
Even erring on the side of vision in their estimates, the researchers found that echolocation was twice as effective as vision in detecting the insects in medium to low light - from 40 feet away versus the 20 feet that was the effective range with vision.
Previous studies have shown that echolocation provides more accurate estimates of the distance and velocity of objects, and sometimes even of the distance of the background behind them.
These results suggest that echolocation gives bats a huge evolutionary advantage, allowing them to track insects from further away and with greater accuracy at peak feeding time.
Echolocation also allows bats to continue hunting into the night, when their competitors are blinded by darkness.
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