10 animals with the loudest voice

10. Technically, the crocodile does not have vocal cords, but one surprising thing is, this does not prevent them from making noise. Crocodile hissing, snorting, coughing, growling and, most famously, under water, making infrasonic sounds that give rise to small coils on the surface of water, making it vibrate or "dance." Although the resulting frequency is too low for humans to hear, but the sound can reach long distances to reach out to potential mates.

9. A kind of large kiwi bird is native to New Zealand and worked very hard on the breeding season. Kakapos males will create a sort of amphitheater in their own environment. The latter, Kakapo be cleared, the air bag inflates his chest, then releases a high resonating sound that can be heard up to three miles away! She continued the ritual each night for four months, pumping out up to 10,000 calls.

8. If you go camping in the wilds of Minnesota and you are disturbed by the cries of wolves, do not panic, though it may sound horrible, the wolf may be 10 miles away. A wolf howl can identify each other from a distance just by dialing their own. When they are conducting the choir, it is intended that the predators can not guess how many wolves they will face? Whether 1 or even 100?

7. The secret behind the high-pitched voice is a monkey in the throat sac, which contains a special pouch on the box that amplifies sound by a call to scare others from its territory and away from valuable fruit trees. Well, it's a monkey who really liked the fruit trees!

6. It makes sense that the largest land animal in the world not only weighs a ton, but it makes a ton of sound as well. Elephants use more than 25 different calls. The trunk acts as a kind of resonating chamber, the speakers burst out of the large lungs. Elephants can also communicate remotely with the help of infrasound - low frequency, sub-sonic rumbling which can actually be felt through the elephant's sensitive skin on the legs and trunk. There is an opportunity to leave the tuning to each other.

5. The crickets are probably only 1 or 2 inches, but with the "song" that can hit 120 decibels, it is also easily the loudest insects in the world. This bug was decent pile of tickets for disturbing the peace, which comes as a result of hard squeezing noisemakers, called timbals, located at the base of the abdomen. No cymbals, timbals - and their contracts to create super-fast sit-ups with a sound reminiscent of the saw at full speed. Noise does have meaning: it is a male mating call, and more than 250 species of crickets each playing their own songs. So, if you've been looking for the perfect ditty for downloading to an MP3 player, here are 250 ideas!

4. When the cry of a bat's head off, not only do your best impersonation Naomi Campbell, but also involves an internal GPS system. High-pitched voice acting as bat sonar to help find their way in the dark, and it makes for a pretty good map. Sonarnya so right, bats can distinguish between objects that are just as far apart as the width of human hair, regardless of lighting. Note to self: never play "Pin the Tail on the Donkey" with a bat.

3. Yes, herring emitting gas from their buttocks to talk with one another and to frighten predators, but at frequencies too low for humans have ever heard. If it sounds to us, it will sound like a jet taking off - a little hard to pretend like it's just your shoes, huh?

2. The Pope can shout across oceans - literally. Well, at least to the blue whale, with sneezing that can be heard on the other side of the world. The humpback won "Most Chatty," with songs lasting up to half an hour and took more than 100 miles away. Sperm whales use sound to hunt even in the dark depths of the ocean floor, diving and navigation, such as bats with sonar signals that can be shot with the power to paralyze the squid cannon. That some of the stun gun!

1. A shrimp is shattered only by the snap is definitely worth a No. 1 on the list "Loudmouths". Found in tropical reefs around the world, equipped with a pistol shrimp, well, a pistol, in the form of large claws that shoot out jets of water. River water moving with such speed that creates air bubbles. After this little grenade implodes, it packs a great punch, creating a shock wave that big whale louder than the calls that can kill fish and other shrimp up to 6 feet away. Snap Rami also emit small flashes of light, which momentarily causes the temperature inside the bubble soared more than 8,500 degrees Fahrenheit - which is one of the hot stove you do not want to touch!

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