Dowdy Nicolas J, Conner William E
1Department of Biology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina USA.
2Invertebrate Zoology, Milwaukee Public Museum, 800 W. Wells Street, Milwaukee, WI USA.
Front Zool. 2019 Dec 10;16:45. doi: 10.1186/s12983-019-0345-6. eCollection 2019.
Acoustic signals are used by many animals to transmit information. Variation in the acoustic characteristics of these signals often covaries with morphology and can relay information about an individual's fitness, sex, species, and/or other characteristics important for both mating and defense. Tiger moths (Lepidoptera: Erebidae: Arctiinae) use modified cuticular plates called "tymbal organs" to produce ultrasonic clicks which can aposematically signal their toxicity, mimic the signals of other species, or, in some cases, disrupt bat echolocation. The morphology of the tymbal organs and the sounds they produce vary greatly between species, but it is unclear how the variation in morphology gives rise to the variation in acoustic characteristics. This is the first study to determine how the morphological features of tymbals can predict the acoustic characteristics of the signals they produce.
We show that the number of striations on the tymbal surface (historically known as "microtymbals") and, to a lesser extent, the ratio of the projected surface area of the tymbal to that of the thorax have a strong, positive correlation with the number of clicks a moth produces per unit time. We also found that some clades have significantly different regression coefficients, and thus the relationship between microtymbals and click rate is also dependent on the shared ancestry of different species.
Our predictive model allows the click rates of moths to be estimated using preserved material (e.g., from museums) in cases where live specimens are unavailable. This has the potential to greatly accelerate our understanding of the distribution of sound production and acoustic anti-bat strategies employed by tiger moths. Such knowledge will generate new insights into the evolutionary history of tiger moth anti-predator defenses on a global scale.
许多动物利用声学信号来传递信息。这些信号的声学特征变化通常与形态学特征相关联,并且可以传递有关个体健康状况、性别、物种和/或其他对交配和防御都很重要的特征的信息。虎蛾(鳞翅目:夜蛾科:灯蛾亚科)利用被称为“鼓膜器官”的改良角质板来产生超声波咔嗒声,这些咔嗒声可以作为警戒信号表明它们的毒性,模仿其他物种的信号,或者在某些情况下干扰蝙蝠的回声定位。鼓膜器官的形态及其产生的声音在不同物种之间差异很大,但目前尚不清楚形态学上的差异是如何导致声学特征的变化的。这是第一项确定鼓膜的形态特征如何预测其产生的信号的声学特征的研究。
我们发现,鼓膜表面的条纹数量(历史上称为“微鼓膜”),以及在较小程度上,鼓膜的投影表面积与胸部投影表面积的比值,与蛾类单位时间内产生的咔嗒声数量呈强正相关。我们还发现,一些进化枝具有显著不同的回归系数,因此微鼓膜与咔嗒声率之间的关系也取决于不同物种的共同祖先。
我们的预测模型使得在无法获得活体标本的情况下,可以使用保存的材料(例如来自博物馆的材料)来估计蛾类的咔嗒声率。这有可能极大地加速我们对虎蛾声音产生分布和声学抗蝙蝠策略的理解。这些知识将为全球范围内虎蛾反捕食者防御的进化历史带来新的见解。