yes, animals hear thousands of high pitched noises that we cant hear at all. hope this helps :)
Animals such as dogs, cats, and certain insects can hear ultrasound frequencies that are beyond the range of human hearing. Whales and dolphins can also detect sounds in the infrasound range, which are lower than what humans can perceive.
Dogs have an inner cochlear we do not that is why some dogs react to high pitch sounds and even either howl or whimp it hurts so never ever yell at your dog right in their ear, it is so sensitive you could burst his or her eardrum entirely
Not all animals can make vocal noises, but many can produce sounds in other ways such as through movement or physical interactions.Each species has its own way of communicating and some animals may have evolved to be silent to avoid predators or to communicate using other means, such as body language or scent marking.
Animals communicate through different methods than humans, such as body language, vocalizations, and pheromones. Their understanding of language and ability to vocalize complex thoughts is limited compared to humans. While we can establish connections with animals through training, observation, and understanding their behaviors, true two-way verbal communication is not possible due to these differences in language and cognitive abilities.
No, some animals have different ways of hearing. An example is a bat, because bats come out at night, they cant really see well so the use something called echolocation which helps them find their way through the night.
Bats. They are blind and use echolocation to navigate when they are flying. They emit high pitched sounds humans ears are unable to hear. The sound frequency in a human voice is too low pitched for them to hear.
yes, animals hear thousands of high pitched noises that we cant hear at all. hope this helps :)
so the animals and humans can restock on their food they cant carry all of it in their sleds so the animals and humans can restock on their food they cant carry all of it in their sleds so the animals and humans can restock on their food they cant carry all of it in their sleds
yes they can
list two examples of how animals use sounds that people cant hear.
bats use a sense called echolocation. not all bats have it. the fruit bat or the flying foxes don't have it. echolocation sends out squeaks or clicks through their mouth, but some like the leaf-nosed bats send out through their nostrils.
bats use echolocation. that means that they make high piched sound waves that humans cant hear, which bounce of objects around them, telling the bat what is around it so it can fly without bumping into anything
You cant get those figures on humans, let alone animals.
Animals such as dogs, cats, and certain insects can hear ultrasound frequencies that are beyond the range of human hearing. Whales and dolphins can also detect sounds in the infrasound range, which are lower than what humans can perceive.
Some animals are very good at "reading" humans. Most notably canines (dogs).
Yes, especially at night when their vision is superb compared to humans.