Download - 746 Lecture 2

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746 Lecture 2

Echolocation in Bats

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Aim Outline properties of sound Hunting behaviour of bats Types of Echolocation sounds Specialisation of

Ear CNS

Auditory behaviour of moths

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Properties of sound Sound is wave of rarefaction and

compression has speed 330m/s, c = f * wavelength - determines whether

objects will reflect or diffract sound frequency f intensity -

measured in dB

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Harmonics multiples of frequency usually less intense

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Hunting behaviour of bats

Taphozous

Pipistrellus

Megaderma

Hipposideros

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Echolocation sounds all bats use “ultrasonic” sounds CF -

constant frequency long tone, often with some harmonics velocity

FM - frequency modulated short burst of sound range determination

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CF

in free air

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FM near ground

or vegetation

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CF-FM CF then droop depends on

place

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Landing - Rhinopoma

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catching - Myotis

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What will bat hear? itself ? reflection ?

quieter more variable? Doppler shift in frequency ?

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Doppler shift (i) emitted sound

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Doppler shift (ii) Reflected sound sometimes in phase

and sometimes out of phase

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Doppler shift (iii) If reflected and emitted sound have similar

intensity, Doppler echo will generate beats

Production of new frequency from old!

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Doppler summary New frequency – depends on ratio of

outgoing sound and incoming sound Incoming sound is reflected off

ground/trees Difference in frequency therefore tells

how fast the bat is flying fnew = fout (v + s)/v

v speed of sound s speed of bat

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Echoes From stationary insect

head on- symmetrical sideways on asymmetric

Echoes from fixed Tipula

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Moving Tipula

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Summary so far Ultrasonic sound

CF FM habitat dependent

Echoes return information moving insects time to return frequency spectrum

shifted broadened

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Behaviour to physiology

Specialisation of Ear CNS

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Human ear

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Bat ear (i) Large pinnae

directional sensitivity extra gain

Tragus elevation

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Bat ears (ii) middle ear muscles

reduce sensitivity while emitting?

flying bat

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Bat ear (iii) More of cochlea tuned to high

frequencies than in other mammals

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Tuning curve auditory nerve

tuned to “best” frequency of emitted CF actually to just above (Why?)

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CF lowered in flight Doppler shift as fly towards object

raises return sound frequency

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CNS outline

AC ICCN

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CNS Auditory

cortex neurons sensitive to pairs of stimuli load/quiet delay time

crucial time map

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mechanisms of delay coincidence detection

inhibition of sound delay line

slow axon synapse

control with vocalisation inferior colliculus neurons respond only

30/40ms after vocalisation

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Summary - audition Ear and CNS both highly specialised

more sensitive to ultrasonic frequencies achieve increase in sensitivity to echo respond to pairs of stimuli

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Moth Auditory system 2 axons in ear

low and high threshold

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Behaviour low threshold - fly fast high threshold - stop flying and fall

?like a leaf

Emit clicks - jam bat sonar - phantom echo returns

at wrong time? warning of unpalatability? moths (Euproctis) emit clicks in mimicry

of distasteful moths

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Conclusion co-evolution of bats and moths defence reactions

escape auditory camouflage auditory


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