Chiu Chen, Moss Cynthia F
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Cognitive Science Program, University of Maryland, College Park 20742, USA.
J Acoust Soc Am. 2007 Apr;121(4):2227-35. doi: 10.1121/1.2434760.
The role of the external ear in sonar target localization for prey capture was studied by deflecting the tragus of six big brown bats, Eptesicus fuscus. The prey capture performance of the bat dropped significantly in the tragus-deflection condition, compared with baseline, control, and recovery conditions. Target localization error occurred in the tragus-deflected bat, and mainly in elevation. The deflection of the tragus did not abolish the prey capture ability of the bat, which suggests that other cues are available used for prey localization. Adaptive vocal and motor behaviors were also investigated in this study. The bat did not show significant changes in vocal behaviors but modified its flight trajectories in response to the tragus manipulation. The tragus-deflected bat tended to attack the prey item from above and had lower tangential velocity and larger bearing from the side, compared with baseline and recovery conditions. These findings highlight the contribution of the tragus to vertical sound localization in the free-flying big brown bat and demonstrate flight adaptations the bat makes to compensate altered acoustic cues.
通过使6只大棕蝠(棕蝠)的耳屏发生偏转而研究了外耳在声纳目标定位以捕获猎物方面的作用。与基线、对照和恢复条件相比,在耳屏偏转条件下,蝙蝠的猎物捕获表现显著下降。耳屏偏转的蝙蝠出现了目标定位误差,且主要在仰角方面。耳屏的偏转并未消除蝙蝠的猎物捕获能力,这表明还有其他线索可用于猎物定位。本研究还调查了适应性发声和运动行为。蝙蝠的发声行为没有显著变化,但会根据耳屏操作改变其飞行轨迹。与基线和恢复条件相比,耳屏偏转的蝙蝠倾向于从上方攻击猎物,且切向速度较低,从侧面的方位角较大。这些发现突出了耳屏对自由飞行的大棕蝠垂直声音定位的贡献,并证明了蝙蝠为补偿改变的声学线索而做出的飞行适应性变化。