Moths can jam bat sonar by using ultrasound blasts
July 18th, 2009 - 12:28 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )
Washington, July 18 (ANI): A new study has found out that moths can use ultrasound blasts to disrupt sonar from predatory bats, thus evading detection by the flying mammals.
Bats emit high-pitched cries, then listen as the sound waves bounce off nearby objects-allowing the bats to find and eat tiny insects in the dark, among other things.
Yet, bats aren’t the only ones making waves. Some tiger moth species make ultrasonic clicks with their bodies.
“These clicks were puzzling to us, because we did not know if they were being used to startle attacking bats, warn the bats that the moths tasted bad, or somehow confuse the bats by jamming their sonar,” study co-author William Conner, a biologist at Wake Forest University, told National Geographic News.
To find out, Wake Forest research team had so-called big brown bats hunt tiger moths in a chamber fitted with ultrasonic recording equipment and high-speed infrared video.
If the moth sound is used to startle bats, then in the chamber, the bats should be disrupted on first attack, then learn to ignore the ultrasonic click, the team figured.
That didn’t happen.
If the moths’ clicks are warnings that the insects taste bad, then the bats should hear the click, bite the moth-and never do so again whenever they hear the sound.
That didn’t happen either.
Instead, the bats regularly missed the moths when the ultrasonic clicks were emitted-proof, the team says, that moths have evolved a way to jam bat sonar. (ANI)
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Tags: bat sonar, biologist, blasts, brown bats, co author, forest research, mammals, moth, moth species, moths, national geographic, national geographic news, nearby objects, sound waves, tiger moth, tiger moths, tiny insects, ultrasound, wake forest university, william conner