Skip to Content
Advertisement
Zoology

A Spooktacular Bat Ballet

Watch how hundreds of thousands of bats choreograph jam-packed nightly migrations with surprising grace.

Every summer evening, deep in the Hill Country of central Texas, hundreds of thousands of Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) pour from the mouth of a limestone cave. The pungent smell of guano and the rush of sound and air from so many wings beating at once is an experience that truly overwhelms the senses.

Featured Video

Then, just like that, it’s over—in a matter of minutes, members of the entire colony have emerged from the cave and disappeared into the dusk for their nightly foraging flight. To the naked eye, in real-time, the colony exodus is a blur of wings and bodies moving too fast to track. Yet somehow, the entire colony manages to exit the cave, night after night, without traffic jams or (many) casualties. How do they achieve this incredible feat?

Not long ago, scientists Nickolay Hristov and Louise Allen set out to answer this question. Using high-speed video cameras, they captured these events—and interactions among individual bats—in spectacular detail. Frame by frame, they discovered that it’s not always necessary for nature to come up with the perfect solution—only one that’s good enough.

Produced by Spine Films.

This story originally appeared in bioGraphic, an independent magazine about nature and regeneration powered by the California Academy of Sciences.

Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

Related Stories

Watch Bison Fend Off a Wolf Attack on a Newborn Calf

They’re not usually considered prey for wolves

June 30, 2026

There May Be Three Times More Insect Species Than We Realized

The overwhelming majority are unknown to science

June 29, 2026

Evidence of Recently Discovered Bat Behavior Found Hiding in Plain Sight in Renaissance Painting

The Flemish painter Jan Brueghel the Elder captured the bird-eating behavior in 1611

June 29, 2026

Four New Chameleon Species Found in Tropical “Sky Islands”

Two of which are named after pioneering female scientists

June 26, 2026

How Fruit Flies Manage Their Exceptionally Long Sperm

If human sperm were a foot long, fruit fly sperm would span three football fields