A few weeks ago, I was on vacation on Bintan in Indonesia.
One evening, we were having drinks at a local kopitiam.
It had a low thatched ceiling.
Anyway, to make a long story short, as we were sitting there a small bat flew in and hung up side down from the ceiling.
It had no fear of us. I decided I wanted to get a photo so I got my camera and approached. I got a real good close up only a couple of inches away.
The camera flashed and the bat stayed in place. I couldn’t really tell, but it looked a bit confussed and I realized I must have blinded this nocturnal creature. Later, when I looked at the picture, the eyes where ablaze with reflective light.
So I started wondering. I realize bats mainly navigate through sonar, but could I have caused permanent damage to this creatures nocturnal eyes with the flash of my camera? Or was it just a temporary blinding, like we get when suddenly exposed to bright light in the dark?
Would be happy if someone could put my guilty conscience to rest.
Found this.
http://ladywildlife.com/animal/howbatsseeinthedark.html
http://www.sbnp.org/Wetlands/text/00-7-2-5.htm
This is the same structure that makes deer, cat, and raccoon eyes glow in the oncoming headlights.
I’m going to guess that your average bat has your average nocturnal mammalian eyes, with “reasonable” eyesight (as opposed to the “superb” eyesight of, say, a hawk), and that your batty friend who just dropped in for a drink and had a tourist take his picture when he wasn’t looking, suffered nothing more annoying than spots in front of his eyes for a minute or two, and a private resolve never to go into town until after the tour buses leave.