Why Bats Are More Efficient Flyers Than Birds

Flexible, highly articulated wings give bats more options for flight than birds: more lift, less drag, greater maneuverability.
(Image credit: K. Breuer, Harvard University)

Their motions might seem erratic and graceless, but bats are more efficient flyers than birds, thanks to an airlift mechanism that is unique among aerial creatures, new wind-tunnel tests show.

Previous studies that compared oxygen consumption among birds, insects and bats of similar sizes—a hummingbird, a small bat and a large moth, for example—found that bats [image] use less energy to fly, but “no one’s really had an explanation for this phenomenon,” said study team member Sharon Swartz, an associate professor in ecology and evolutionary biology at Brown University.

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