Clare Elizabeth L, Holderied Marc W
School of Biological and Chemical Science, Queen Mary University of London, London, United Kingdom.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Elife. 2015 Sep 1;4:e07404. doi: 10.7554/eLife.07404.
Perceptual abilities of animals, like echolocating bats, are difficult to study because they challenge our understanding of non-visual senses. We used novel acoustic tomography to convert echoes into visual representations and compare these cues to traditional echo measurements. We provide a new hypothesis for the echo-acoustic basis of prey detection on surfaces. We propose that bats perceive a change in depth profile and an 'acoustic shadow' cast by prey. The shadow is more salient than prey echoes and particularly strong on smooth surfaces. This may explain why bats look for prey on flat surfaces like leaves using scanning behaviour. We propose that rather than forming search images for prey, whose characteristics are unpredictable, predators may look for disruptions to the resting surface (acoustic shadows). The fact that the acoustic shadow is much fainter on rougher resting surfaces provides the first empirical evidence for 'acoustic camouflage' as an anti-predator defence mechanism.
像使用回声定位的蝙蝠这样的动物的感知能力很难研究,因为它们挑战了我们对非视觉感官的理解。我们使用了新颖的声学层析成像技术将回声转换为视觉表征,并将这些线索与传统的回声测量进行比较。我们为表面猎物探测的回声 - 声学基础提供了一个新的假设。我们提出,蝙蝠感知到深度轮廓的变化以及猎物投射的“声影”。声影比猎物回声更显著,在光滑表面上尤其强烈。这可能解释了为什么蝙蝠利用扫描行为在像树叶这样的平坦表面上寻找猎物。我们提出,捕食者可能不是为特征不可预测的猎物形成搜索图像,而是寻找静止表面的干扰(声影)。在更粗糙的静止表面上声影要微弱得多这一事实为“声学伪装”作为一种反捕食者防御机制提供了首个实证证据。