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Humans can hear sounds roughly between 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz. Anything below 20 Hz is called infrasound, and anything above 20,000 Hz is called ultrasound.
Many animals can hear these “extra” sounds that we cannot. This ability helps them hunt, escape danger, communicate, and navigate their environment.
So the big question is:
How do animals hear sounds that humans can’t?
Let’s break this down step by step like we would in a classroom.
Sound is a wave produced by vibrations.
It travels through a medium like air, water, or solids.
If you're curious about the physics behind this, check out our guide on how sound travels: understanding waves and vibrations to see how these particles actually move.
Two main properties decide what we hear:
| Property | What it decides |
| Frequency (Hz) | Pitch (high or low sound) |
| Amplitude | Loudness |
Wondering why some sounds feel 'sharp' while others are just loud? Here is a breakdown of what determines the pitch and loudness of sound.
| Living Being | Hearing Range (Approx.) | Special Purpose |
| Human | 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz | Speech, music |
| Dog | 40 Hz to 60,000 Hz | Detect danger, hunting |
| Cat | 45 Hz to 85,000 Hz | Catch small prey |
| Bat | 1,000 Hz to 120,000 Hz | Echolocation |
| Dolphin | 150 Hz to 150,000 Hz | Underwater navigation |
| Elephant | 5 Hz to 12,000 Hz | Long-distance communication |
Animals don’t go to school or read warning boards. Their survival depends on their senses.
Real-life classroom example
A bat flying in the dark forest cannot see insects clearly.
So it sends out ultrasound and listens to the echo.
That echo tells it:
Where the insect is
Animals hear beyond humans mainly because of their ear design.
Let’s compare.
Ear Structure Comparison Table
| Feature | Human Ear | Animal Ear (e.g. dog/bat) |
| Ear canal length | Medium | Longer and narrow |
| Ear shape | Rounded | Funnel-shaped |
| Eardrum sensitivity | Moderate | Very high |
| Cochlea | Shorter | Longer, more nerve cells |
| Hair cells (inner ear) | Fewer | More, specially tuned |
Important idea:
More sensitive hair cells --> can detect tiny vibrations --> higher or lower frequencies become audible.
Sound relation:
v = f \lambda
Where:
| Type of sound | Frequency | Wavelength | Who uses it |
| Infrasound | Below 20 Hz | Very long | Elephants, whales |
| Audible sound | 20 to 20,000 Hz | Medium | Humans |
| Ultrasound | Above 20,000 Hz | Very short | Bats, dogs, dolphins |
Sound behaves differently depending on the environment - ever wondered why your voice echoes in an empty hall but not in a furnished room? It all comes back to how waves interact with surfaces.
Meaning:
Animals with larger ears or special skull shapes can catch these long or short waves better than humans.
Numerical example:
If echo returns in 0.01 s and speed of sound is 340 m/s:
Distance = 340 \ 0.01*2 = 1.7 m
So bat knows the insect is 1.7 m away.
It’s a fascinating survival strategy - you can read our full case study on how bats navigate in complete darkness to see this 'biological radar' in action.
Humans cannot do this because:
Their lower jaw acts like a sound receiver and sends signals to the brain.
This is why submarines copy dolphin systems --> SONAR.
The same principles of reflection and amplification are used in medicine; see how we’ve mastered this in our study on how doctors hear heartbeats through a stethoscope.
Analogy Table
| Real-life object | Animal ability | Explanation |
| Mobile flashlight | Bat echolocation | Both help in darkness |
| Walkie-talkie | Elephant infrasound | Long-distance talk |
| Speed camera | Dog hearing | Detects things before we notice |
| Radar | Dolphin sonar | Finds hidden objects |
While our ears filter out these extremes, we also distinguish between pleasant and unpleasant sounds; explore the difference between music and noise to see how our brain processes complex patterns.
So limitation is actually helpful.Problem
Many students think animals hear better because their ears are just “bigger”.
Agitation
This leads to wrong exam answers like:
“Animals hear ultrasound because their ears are large.”
Solution
Correct idea: Animals hear beyond humans because of:
| Mistake | Correct Concept |
| Bigger ear = better hearing | Sensitivity matters, not size only |
| Animals hear louder sounds | They hear different frequencies |
| Humans are weak at hearing | Humans are tuned for speech |
| Ultrasound is loud sound | Ultrasound is high-frequency sound |
Explanation:
| Concept | One-line meaning |
| Ultrasound | Sound above 20 kHz |
| Infrasound | Sound below 20 Hz |
| Echolocation | Using echoes to locate objects |
| Cochlea | Sound-processing organ |
| Hair cells | Detect vibrations |
Ready to ace your next exam? Practice makes perfect. Tackle our Grade 9 Physics Worksheets, then test your speed with Unsolved Practice Papers. If you get stuck, we’ve got you covered with Solved Practice Papers to help you understand the 'why' behind the answer.
If you remember only one line:
That single sentence can fetch you marks in exams.
Think you’ve mastered the world of animal hearing? Challenge yourself with our latest Sound Quizzes. If you still have a nagging question, post it in our Discuss Form where our community helps each other learn. For students looking for personalized support, feel free to drop a Tuition Inquiry or reach out via our General Inquiry form for any other help!
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