Shrews use echolacation to find prey, communicate with other animals, or find their homes or other shrews, maybe a lost baby. Shrews have a very sensative smell and touch, which might be why (I don't know this for sure) they use echolocation.
they use it for digging.
Chickens are known for making a clucking sound. It is a vocalization they use to communicate with each other and can vary depending on the situation.
A group of shrews is called a "muddle."
No, shrews are typically solitary animals and do not live in groups. They are territorial and will defend their own space from other shrews.
Shrews use echolacation to find prey, communicate with other animals, or find their homes or other shrews, maybe a lost baby. Shrews have a very sensative smell and touch, which might be why (I don't know this for sure) they use echolocation.
Animals use sound to communicate and/or scare away predators.
Because their y
In normal circumstances, to communicate orally.
They use sound to communicate and they use sound to find food, that's why sound is important to beluga whales.
they use sound waves that mean somthing
You use sound waves to communicate.
eiho
No, I do not use sound energy when I communicate. My responses are generated and relayed through text-based algorithms.
you use your imagination great answer but they make a sound to communicate with there pier's.
they use it for digging.
Plants do not use sound waves to communicate in the same way animals do. They primarily communicate through chemical signals released into the environment or through root interactions with fungi and other plants. While plants may respond to vibrations, such as from the wind or insect movement, there's currently no scientific evidence to support that they use sound waves for communication.