Wake Forest University, Department of Biology, Winston-Salem, NC 27106, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2012 Dec 15;215(Pt 24):4278-87. doi: 10.1242/jeb.076943.
Bats and insects provide a model system for integrating our understanding of predator-prey ecology, animal behavior and neurophysiology. Previous field studies of bat-insect interactions have been limited by the technological challenges involved with studying nocturnal, volant animals that use ultrasound and engage in battles that frequently last a fraction of a second. We overcame these challenges using a robust field methodology that included multiple infrared cameras calibrated for three-dimensional reconstruction of bat and moth flight trajectories and four ultrasonic microphones that provided a spatial component to audio recordings. Our objectives were to document bat-moth interactions in a natural setting and to test the effectiveness of a unique prey defense - sonar jamming. We tested the effect of sonar jamming by comparing the results of interactions between bats and Grote's tiger moth, Bertholdia trigona, with their sound-producing organs either intact or ablated. Jamming was highly effective, with bats capturing more than 10 times as many silenced moths as clicking moths. Moths frequently combined their acoustic defense with two separate evasive maneuvers: flying away from the bat and diving. Diving decreased bat capture success for both clicking and silenced moths, while flying away did not. The diving showed a strong directional component, a first for insect defensive maneuvers. We discuss the timing of B. trigona defensive maneuvers - which differs from that of other moths - in the context of moth auditory neuroethology. Studying bat-insect interactions in their natural environment provides valuable information that complements work conducted in more controlled settings.
蝙蝠和昆虫为整合我们对捕食者-猎物生态学、动物行为和神经生理学的理解提供了一个模型系统。以前对蝙蝠-昆虫相互作用的野外研究受到了研究夜间飞行、使用超声波并经常进行持续几分之一秒的战斗的动物所涉及的技术挑战的限制。我们通过使用一种强大的野外方法克服了这些挑战,该方法包括多个经校准的红外摄像机,用于三维重建蝙蝠和飞蛾的飞行轨迹,以及四个超声麦克风,为音频记录提供空间成分。我们的目标是在自然环境中记录蝙蝠-飞蛾相互作用,并测试一种独特的猎物防御——声纳干扰的有效性。我们通过比较蝙蝠和格罗特虎蛾(Bertholdia trigona)之间的相互作用的结果来测试声纳干扰的效果,这些蛾的发声器官要么完好无损,要么被切除。干扰非常有效,蝙蝠捕捉的静音蛾是点击蛾的 10 多倍。飞蛾经常将其声学防御与两种单独的回避动作结合起来:远离蝙蝠飞行和俯冲。俯冲降低了蝙蝠对点击和静音飞蛾的捕获成功率,而飞走则没有。俯冲表现出强烈的方向成分,这是昆虫防御机动的第一个。我们讨论了 B. trigona 防御机动的时机——与其他飞蛾不同——在飞蛾听觉神经行为学的背景下。在自然环境中研究蝙蝠-昆虫相互作用提供了有价值的信息,补充了在更受控环境中进行的工作。