The response of tympanate moths to the echolocation calls of a substrate gleaning bat,Myotis evotis
✍ Scribed by Paul A. Faure; James H. Fullard; Robert M. R. Barclay
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 685 KB
- Volume
- 166
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-7594
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✦ Synopsis
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Most studies examining interactions between insectivorous bats and tympanate prey use the echolocation calls of aerially-feeding bats in their analyses. We examined the auditory responses of noctuid (Eurois astricta) and notodontid (Pheosia rimosa) moth to the echolocation call characteristics of a gleaning insectivorous bat, Myotis evotis.
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While gleaning, M. evotis used short duration (mean_SD=0.66_+0.28 ms, Table 2), high frequency, FM calls (FM sweep = 80-37 kHz) of relatively low intensity (77.3 +2.9, -4.2 dB SPL). Call peak frequency was 52.2 kHz with most of the energy above 50 kHz (Fig. 1).
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Echolocation was not required for prey detection or capture as calls were emitted during only 50% of hovers and 59% of attacks. When echolocation was used, bats ceased calling 324.7 (+200.4) ms before attacking (Fig. 2), probably using prey-generated sounds to locate fluttering moths. Mean call repetition rate during gleaning attacks was 21.7 (___ 15.5) calls/s and feeding buzzes were never recorded.
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Eurois astricta and P. rimosa are typical of most tympanate moths having ears with BFs between 20 and 40 kHz (Fig. 3); apparently tuned to the echolocation calls of aerially-feeding bats. The ears of both species respond poorly to the high frequency, short duration, faint stimuli representing the echolocation calls of gleaning M. evotis .
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Our results demonstrate that tympanate moths, and potentially other nocturnal insects, are unable to detect the echolocation calls typical of gleaning bats and thus are particularly susceptible to predation.