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On warm nights bats began swirling low over fields of solar panels, and what they seemed to mistake all that glass for took the scientists by surprise

Carlos Albero Rojas by Carlos Albero Rojas
June 16, 2026 at 4:56 PM
in Energy
Bats began swirling solar panels

On a warm summer night, in the middle of a field of solar panels, something unexpected was unfolding in the dark.

Bats, dozens of them, were swirling low over the rows of glass, diving and weaving the way they do above a pond at dusk. Researchers with recorders caught the rapid clicks of a hunt, again and again.

There was just one problem. There was no water for miles. So what had drawn them to a dry field of electronics, and what did they think they had found?

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A strange new hunting ground after dark

Scientists had begun pointing bat detectors at solar farms, curious whether the animals avoided the panels or used them.

What they heard caught them off guard. Over the glass came the unmistakable sound of feeding buzzes, the burst of clicks a bat makes in the final split second before it snaps an insect out of the air. It is the sound of a successful kill, and the recorders were picking it up over and over.

The dark field was not empty at all. It had quietly become a gathering place after sunset, and the reason was floating in the air just above the panels. Bat after bat arrived, looped and dove, treating the rows of cold glass like the best fishing spot in the county.

Clouds of insects above the glass

On many nights the air over the panels was thick with insects. Mayflies, midges, moths and the small flying things that bats live on. On a good night it can look less like a power plant and more like the edge of a marsh.

To a bat, that is a feast worth crossing a whole landscape for. But the insects were not there by chance, and they were not simply passing through.

Something about the panels themselves was calling them down out of the night sky toward the smooth dark surface. And it was the very same signal that was quietly fooling the bats. The swarm hung there night after night, a living cloud no ordinary dry field would ever gather.

The night a field of panels turned into a lake

Here is the strange truth. A smooth solar panel reflects light in a particular twisted way, called polarized light, almost identical to the way the surface of open water reflects it.

For millions of years that polarized shine has meant one thing to the night world, a lake, a river, a pond. Insects read it as water and rush in to lay their eggs on the glass as if it were a still pool. A mayfly that has waited its whole life for one night of water can spend it laying eggs on a sheet of silicon.

And the bats, drawn by both the swarming insects and that same watery gleam, arrive expecting to skim a drink and hunt over open water. To a great deal of nighttime wildlife, a field of solar panels simply looks like a lake that should not be there.

A mirror that promises more than it gives

That illusion comes with a hidden cost, because the watery shine is really a kind of trap.

A bat reads the flat surface as water and tries to drink from solid glass. Its echolocation, tuned to expect a pond, grows confused above the panels. And the insects, settling onto the surface instead of flying free in the air, turn out to be far harder to catch on the wing. A hunter built over millions of years for ponds and rivers meets a pond that holds no water and gives back nothing.

When researchers measured it carefully, several studies found bat activity actually fell over solar farms rather than rising. The lake the bats had been promised, it turned out, fed almost no one.

How to stop a solar farm from telling a lie

Here is the genuinely hopeful part. The illusion is surprisingly easy to break.

Add a simple pattern of pale grid lines across the panels, or one of the new nano coatings that scatter the reflection, and the watery gleam disappears. To an insect or a bat, the surface goes back to being just a dark object in a field, nothing to mistake for water. The panel stops pretending to be a lake, at the cost of barely more than one percent of its power. Leaving gaps in the fences and native plants along the edges helps the solar site become real habitat rather than a mirage.

Done that way, a solar farm can stop fooling the bats and start feeding them for real, a field that makes clean power by day and hums with hunting wings by night. The same glass that once told a quiet lie can, with one small change, finally tell the truth.

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