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Bats and death metal singers use the same throat structure to growl

Daubenton鈥檚 bats use false vocal folds in their throat to produce a lower frequency grunt for communication 鈥 the same structure that lets death metal singers growl

By Sam Jones

29 November 2022

Daubenton's bat (Myotis daubentonii) Credit: Jens Rydell

Daubenton’s bats (Myotis daubentonii) have false vocal folds like humans

Jens Rydell

Bats are known for their high-frequency calls, which they use to echolocate and catch prey, but they also let out much lower frequency calls for bat-to-bat communication. The structure in a bat鈥檚 larynx that lets them produce these sounds is the same one used by death metal singers to growl out low notes.

For decades, scientists speculated as to which structures in a bat鈥檚 larynx produce different frequencies. 鈥淏ut that was just through anatomical inspection,鈥 says at the University of Colorado Colorado Springs. 鈥淎nd then we went ahead and said, 鈥榃ell, is that actually the case?鈥欌

H氓kansson and his colleagues affixed individual larynges dissected from Daubenton’s bats (Myotis daubentonii) with a microphone and placed them under a microscope. They then funnelled air up through the larynx, simulating how it would travel out of a vocalising bat鈥檚 mouth. This airflow caused structures in the larynx to vibrate and produce sound, which the researchers captured with an ultra-high-speed camera. The researchers pinpointed two laryngeal structures responsible for the extreme highs and lows of a bat鈥檚 vocal range, which spans three or four more octaves than the average human鈥檚.

They found that high-frequency echolocation calls are produced by thin, translucent vocal membranes that rest atop the vocal cords. Lower frequency squeaks came from the bats鈥 false vocal folds, which get their name from the fact that 鈥渋n humans they are rarely used, never for speech鈥, says at the University of Southern Denmark. False vocal folds are, however, believed to be used in extreme vocalisers like death metal grunters. In a way, says Elemans, social squeaks are a bat鈥檚 version of death metal. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very high frequency sound for us,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut for them, it’s extremely low.鈥

H氓kansson is impressed but not surprised that bats use two distinct structures to make vocalisations that span around seven octaves. 鈥淚t鈥檚 sort of like having one pair of legs for walking and one pair for running,鈥 he says.

at Tel Aviv University in Israel is impressed by the work and would like to see it validated in a living animal, but getting high-speed footage of the inside of a vocalising bat isn鈥檛 currently possible. 鈥淚’m just waiting for the technology that will allow us to do it,鈥 he says.

Although the average human can鈥檛 compete with a bat, Elemans says the exceptional vocalist shouldn’t lose hope. For example, Mariah Carey has a five-octave vocal range and is known for being able to sing extremely high tones called whistle notes. 鈥淚f Mariah Carey would be very good at grunting, she could also extend her vocal range even further.鈥

PLoS Biology

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