(JEWISH GROUP) For Israel's foremost chiropterologist, every bat is a mitzvah
Professor Yovel, in his element Photo by Ofri Eitan
Bats get bad press. Short-sighted and cave-dwelling, they generally make the news only when carrying disease, transfiguring into vampires, or else lending their name to paranoiac military commanders (e.g. Colonel Bat Guano, in Dr. Strangelove).
All of which is grossly unfair at least according to Yossi Yovel, a professor of zoology at Tel Aviv University, and author of The Genius Bat, recently named a Book of the Year by the science journal Nature.
Usually, bats are very nice, said Yovel.
Indeed, the flying mammals have been remarkably tolerant towards Yovel and his small team of researchers, whove studied bat echolocation for the better part of a decade, and have proved that bats are smarter creatures than previously thought. And only rarely, Yovel said, has he gotten bitten. But you cant blame them, he added. Because youre holding them in your hand, and youre a big creature.
Yovel first encountered the study of bats, or chiropterology, as an undergraduate at Tel Aviv University, where he took a course on bat echolocation, the first ever held in Israel. He was immediately hooked. Suddenly, I discovered this new world! Of using sound for vision, basically, he said.
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