
Bats are idiosyncratic creatures, with habits that humans find incredibly odd—like occasional bloodsucking, sleeping upside down, and staying up all night. We characterize bats as supernatural, associating them with vampires and even superheroes. With their talent for echolocation, that’s no surprise. It’s for that ability to “see” with their ears that bats are perhaps most well known—that, and their supposed blindness, which (as the story goes) makes echolocation necessary for finding and feeding on fruits and insects and other small animals.
But what if the most basic truth you’ve always been told about bats was false? What if being “as blind as a bat” just meant, well, being able to see perfectly well?
