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蝙蝠主动利用叶子作为镜面反射器来探测声音伪装的猎物。

Bats Actively Use Leaves as Specular Reflectors to Detect Acoustically Camouflaged Prey.

机构信息

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado 0843-03092, Balboa, Republic of Panama; Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, Institute for Advanced Study, Wallotstraße 19, 14193 Berlin, Germany.

CoSys Lab, Faculty of Applied Engineering, University of Antwerp, Groenenborgerlaan 171, 2020 Antwerpen, Belgium; Flanders Make Strategic Research Centre, Oude Diestersebaan 133, 3920 Lommel, Belgium.

出版信息

Curr Biol. 2019 Aug 19;29(16):2731-2736.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.06.076. Epub 2019 Aug 1.

Abstract

Filtering relevant signals from noisy sensory input is a crucial challenge for animals [1, 2]. Many bats are acoustic specialists relying on sound to find prey. They discern salient acoustic signals from irrelevant background masking noise. It has long been considered a sensory impossibility for bats to use solely echolocation for the detection of silent and motionless prey resting directly on foliage due to the masking effects of background echoes [3, 4]. Some bats, however, do successfully perform this seemingly impossible task [5], raising the question-what underlying acoustic and behavioral mechanisms do bats use to solve this conundrum? To address this question, we used biomimetic sonar to record high-resolution measurements of echoes from insects resting on leaves. Based on our echo recordings, we predicted optimal approach angles from which masking echoes can best be avoided. In behavioral experiments, we put these predictions to test. We recorded the prey approach behavior of wild bats in a flight cage equipped with an ultrasonic microphone synchronized with two high-speed cameras for 3D flightpath reconstructions. Bats approached prey from our predicted optimal oblique angles, using the leaf as a specular reflector to uncover previously acoustically hidden prey. Our findings disclose key behavioral and acoustic mechanisms enabling the detection of prey echoes that background clutter would otherwise mask. This work adds to the fundamental understanding of how bat echolocation strategies can override acoustic camouflage by silent, motionless prey, thus providing new insights into the evolutionary arms race between predators and their prey.

摘要

从嘈杂的感觉输入中过滤相关信号是动物面临的一个关键挑战[1,2]。许多蝙蝠是声学专家,依靠声音来寻找猎物。它们从无关的背景掩蔽噪声中辨别出显著的声音信号。长期以来,人们一直认为蝙蝠不可能仅依靠回声定位来探测直接栖息在树叶上的无声和静止的猎物,因为背景回波的掩蔽效应[3,4]。然而,一些蝙蝠确实成功地完成了这项看似不可能的任务[5],这就提出了一个问题——蝙蝠使用哪些声学和行为机制来解决这个难题?为了解决这个问题,我们使用仿生声纳记录了昆虫栖息在叶子上时回声的高分辨率测量值。根据我们的回声记录,我们预测了可以最佳避免掩蔽回声的最佳接近角度。在行为实验中,我们对这些预测进行了测试。我们在一个配备超声波麦克风的飞行笼中记录了野生蝙蝠的猎物接近行为,该飞行笼与两个高速摄像机同步,用于 3D 飞行路径重建。蝙蝠从我们预测的最佳倾斜角度接近猎物,利用叶子作为镜面反射器来发现以前被声音隐藏的猎物。我们的发现揭示了关键的行为和声学机制,使蝙蝠能够探测到背景杂波本来会掩盖的猎物回声。这项工作增加了对蝙蝠回声定位策略如何克服无声、静止猎物的声学伪装的基本理解,从而为捕食者及其猎物之间的进化军备竞赛提供了新的见解。

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