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蝙蝠聚集在一起以提高捕食效率,但当它们的密度过高时可能会受到影响。

Bats aggregate to improve prey search but might be impaired when their density becomes too high.

作者信息

Cvikel Noam, Egert Berg Katya, Levin Eran, Hurme Edward, Borissov Ivailo, Boonman Arjan, Amichai Eran, Yovel Yossi

机构信息

Department of Zoology, Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel.

Department of Zoology, Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel; Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel.

出版信息

Curr Biol. 2015 Jan 19;25(2):206-211. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.11.010. Epub 2015 Jan 8.

Abstract

Social foraging is a very common yet extremely complex behavior. Numerous studies attempted to model it with little supporting evidence. Studying it in the wild is difficult because it requires monitoring the animal's movement, its foraging success, and its interactions with conspecifics. We present a novel system that enables full night ultrasonic recording of freely foraging bats, in addition to GPS tracking. As they rely on echolocation, audio recordings of bats allow tapping into their sensory acquisition of the world. Rapid changes in echolocation allowed us to reveal the bats' dynamic reactions in response to prey or conspecifics—two key behaviors that are extremely difficult to assess in most animals. We found that bats actively aggregate and forage as a group. However, we also found that when the group became too dense, bats were forced to devote sensory attention to conspecifics that frequently entered their biosonar "field of view," impairing the bats' prey detection performance. Why then did bats fly in such high densities? By emitting echolocation calls, bats constantly provide public information about their detection of prey. Bats could therefore benefit from intentionally flying at a distance that enables eavesdropping on conspecifics. Group foraging, therefore, probably allowed bats to effectively operate as an array of sensors, increasing their searching efficiency. We suggest that two opposing forces are at play in determining the efficient foraging density: on the one hand, higher densities improve prey detection, but on the other hand, they increase conspecific interference.

摘要

社会觅食是一种非常常见但极其复杂的行为。众多研究试图对其进行建模,但支持证据很少。在野外研究它很困难,因为这需要监测动物的行动、觅食成功率以及它与同种个体的互动。我们提出了一种新颖的系统,除了全球定位系统跟踪外,还能对自由觅食的蝙蝠进行全夜超声波记录。由于蝙蝠依靠回声定位,对它们的录音可以深入了解它们对世界的感官认知。回声定位的快速变化使我们能够揭示蝙蝠对猎物或同种个体的动态反应——这是大多数动物中极难评估的两种关键行为。我们发现蝙蝠会积极聚集并集体觅食。然而,我们也发现,当群体变得过于密集时,蝙蝠被迫将感官注意力投入到频繁进入其生物声纳“视野”的同种个体身上,从而损害了蝙蝠的猎物探测性能。那么,为什么蝙蝠会以如此高的密度飞行呢?通过发出回声定位叫声,蝙蝠不断提供关于它们探测到猎物的公共信息。因此,蝙蝠可能会从故意保持一定距离飞行中受益,以便窃听同种个体的信息。所以,群体觅食可能使蝙蝠能够像一系列传感器一样有效地运作,提高它们的搜索效率。我们认为,在决定有效觅食密度方面有两种相互对立的力量在起作用:一方面,更高的密度能提高猎物探测能力,但另一方面,它们会增加同种个体间的干扰。

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