Suppr超能文献

中程飞行中的猎物转换——缘齿长吻蝠(Trachops cirrhosus)。

Mid-flight prey switching in the fringed-lipped bat (Trachops cirrhosus).

机构信息

Ecology, Evolution, Environment and Society Graduate Program, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, 03755, USA.

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Ancón, Republic of Panama.

出版信息

Naturwissenschaften. 2022 Aug 15;109(5):43. doi: 10.1007/s00114-022-01813-w.

Abstract

While foraging, eavesdropping predators home in on the signals of their prey. Many prey signal from aggregations, however, and predators already en route to attack one individual often encounter the signals of other prey. Few studies have examined whether eavesdropping predators update their foraging decisions by switching to target these more recently signaling prey. Switching could result in reduced localization errors and more current estimates of prey location. Conversely, assessing new cues while already in pursuit of another target might confuse or distract a predator. We tested whether fringed-lipped bats (Trachops cirrhosus) switch prey targets when presented with new cues mid-approach and examined how switching and the distance between simulated prey influence attack accuracy, latency, and prey capture success. During nearly 80% of attack flights, bats switched between túngara frog (Engystomops pustulosus) calls spaced 1 m apart, and switching resulted in lower localization errors. The switching rate was reduced, and the localization advantage disappeared for calls separated by 3 m. Regardless of whether bats switched targets, attacks were less accurate, took longer, and were less often successful when calls were spaced at larger distances, indicating a distraction effect. These results reveal that fringed-lipped bats attend to cues from non-targeted prey during attack flights and that the distance between prey alters the effectiveness of attacks, regardless of whether a bat switches targets. Understanding how eavesdropping predators integrate new signals from neighboring prey into their foraging decisions will lead to a fuller picture of the ways unintended receivers shape the evolution of signaling behavior.

摘要

在觅食时,偷听的捕食者会根据猎物的信号定位猎物。然而,许多猎物会从聚集处发出信号,而且已经在前往攻击一个个体的捕食者经常会遇到其他猎物的信号。很少有研究探讨过偷听的捕食者是否会通过切换到最近发出信号的猎物来更新它们的觅食决策。这种切换可能会减少定位误差,并更准确地估计猎物的位置。相反,在已经追逐另一个目标的同时评估新线索可能会使捕食者感到困惑或分心。我们测试了边缘唇蝠(Trachops cirrhosus)在接近过程中遇到新线索时是否会切换猎物目标,并研究了切换和模拟猎物之间的距离如何影响攻击的准确性、潜伏期和猎物捕获成功率。在近 80%的攻击飞行中,蝙蝠会在相距 1 米的坦戈拉蛙(Engystomops pustulosus)叫声之间切换,切换会导致更低的定位误差。当叫声相隔 3 米时,切换的速度会降低,定位优势也会消失。无论蝙蝠是否切换目标,当叫声间隔较大时,攻击的准确性降低,潜伏期延长,成功率降低,这表明存在分心效应。这些结果表明,边缘唇蝠在攻击飞行中会关注非目标猎物的信号,而猎物之间的距离会改变攻击的有效性,无论蝙蝠是否切换目标。了解偷听的捕食者如何将来自邻近猎物的新信号整合到它们的觅食决策中,将有助于更全面地了解意外接收者如何塑造信号行为的进化。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验