Huang Xiaobin, Kanwal Jagmeet S, Jiang Tinglei, Long Zhenyu, Luo Bo, Yue Xinke, Gu Yongbo, Feng Jiang
Jilin Provincial Key Laboratory of Animal Resource Conservation and Utilization, Northeast Normal University, Changchun, China; Key Laboratory for Wetland Ecology and Vegetation Restoration of National Environmental Protection, Northeast Normal University, Changchun, China.
Departments of Neurology, Neuroscience and Psychology, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington DC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Jul 16;10(7):e0132817. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0132817. eCollection 2015.
Echolocation and audiovocal communication have been studied extensively in bats. The manner in which these abilities are incorporated within escape behaviors during life-threatening distress is largely unknown. Here we tested the hypothesis that behavioral response profiles expressed during distress are relatively stereotypic given their evolutionary adaptations to avoid predators. We subjected juvenile and adult big-footed myotis (Myotis macrodactylus) to a sequence of three types of life threatening distress: 1) trapping them in a mist-net (environmental threat), 2) approaching them when trapped (predator threat), and 3) partially restraining their freedom to move (arrest), and recorded their escape behavior in each of the three conditions. Response profiles differed across individuals and with the context in which they were expressed. During environmental and predator threat, bats displayed significantly more biting and wing-flapping behaviors and emitted more echolocation pulses than during arrest. Response profiles also varied with age. During arrest, juveniles were more likely than adults to emit distress calls and vice-versa for biting and wing flapping during environmental and predator threat. Overall, individualized response profiles were classified into ten clusters that were aligned along two divergent response trajectories when viewed within two-dimensional, multifactorial decision space. Juvenile behaviors tended to follow a predominantly "social-dependence" trajectory, whereas adult behaviors were mostly aligned along a "self-reliance" trajectory. We conclude that bats modify their vocal behavior and make age-appropriate and contextually adaptive decisions when distressed. This decision-making ability is consistent with observations in other social species, including humans.
回声定位和听觉发声交流在蝙蝠中已得到广泛研究。在危及生命的困境中,这些能力如何融入逃避行为,目前很大程度上尚不清楚。在此,我们检验了一个假设,即鉴于其为躲避捕食者而进行的进化适应,困境中表现出的行为反应模式相对刻板。我们让幼年和成年大足鼠耳蝠(Myotis macrodactylus)经历三种危及生命的困境:1)将它们困在雾网中(环境威胁),2)被困时靠近它们(捕食者威胁),3)部分限制其行动自由(拘禁),并记录它们在这三种情况下的逃避行为。个体间的反应模式不同,且因所处情境而异。在环境和捕食者威胁期间,蝙蝠表现出比拘禁期间显著更多的撕咬和振翅行为,发出的回声定位脉冲也更多。反应模式也随年龄而变化。在拘禁期间,幼年蝙蝠比成年蝙蝠更有可能发出求救叫声,而在环境和捕食者威胁期间,成年蝙蝠在撕咬和振翅方面则相反。总体而言,在二维多因素决策空间中观察时,个体的反应模式被分为十个集群,这些集群沿着两条不同的反应轨迹排列。幼年蝙蝠的行为倾向于遵循一条主要为“社会依赖”的轨迹,而成年蝙蝠的行为大多沿着“自力更生”的轨迹排列。我们得出结论,蝙蝠在遇险时会改变其发声行为,并做出符合年龄和情境的适应性决策。这种决策能力与包括人类在内的其他社会物种的观察结果一致。