Sound Communication Group, Institute of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
Biol Lett. 2013 Jan 8;9(2):20121031. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2012.1031. Print 2013 Apr 23.
Since the discovery of echolocation in bats, the final phase of an attack on a flying insect, the 'terminal buzz', has proved enigmatic. During the buzz, bats increase information update rates by producing vocalizations up to 220 times s(-1). The buzz's ubiquity in hawking and trawling bats implies its importance for hunting success. Superfast muscles, previously unknown in mammals, are responsible for the extreme vocalization rate. Some bats produce a second phase-buzz II-defined by a large drop in the fundamental frequency (F(0)) of their calls. By doing so, bats broaden their acoustic field of view and should thereby reduce the likelihood of insect escape. We make the case that the buzz was a critical adaptation for capturing night-flying insects, and suggest that the drop in F(0) during buzz II requires novel, unidentified laryngeal mechanisms in order to counteract increasing muscle tension. Furthermore, we propose that buzz II represents a countermeasure against the evasive flight of eared prey in the evolutionary arms-race that saw the independent evolution of bat-detecting ears in various groups of night-flying insects.
自从在蝙蝠中发现回声定位以来,对飞行昆虫进行攻击的最后阶段,即“终端嗡嗡声”,一直是个谜。在嗡嗡声中,蝙蝠通过产生高达 220 次/秒的发声来增加信息更新率。嗡嗡声在鹰派和拖网蝙蝠中普遍存在,这意味着它对狩猎成功很重要。以前在哺乳动物中未知的超快速肌肉是造成极端发声率的原因。一些蝙蝠产生第二个阶段——嗡嗡声 II——其叫声的基频(F0)大幅下降。这样做可以扩大蝙蝠的声场视野,从而降低昆虫逃脱的可能性。我们认为,嗡嗡声是捕捉夜间飞行昆虫的关键适应,并且建议在嗡嗡声 II 期间 F0 的下降需要新的、未识别的喉部机制,以抵消不断增加的肌肉张力。此外,我们提出嗡嗡声 II 代表了对听觉猎物逃避飞行的一种对策,在这一进化军备竞赛中,各种夜间飞行昆虫群体独立进化出了蝙蝠探测耳朵。