How
to avoid a bat
18-Dec-2006
Current
understanding of the co-evolution of bats and moths has been thrown into question
following new research reported today in Current Biology.
Dr
James Windmill from the University of Bristol, UK, has shown how the Yellow Underwing
moth changes its sensitivity to a bat's calls when the moth is being chased. And
in case there is another attack, the moth's ear remain tuned in for several minutes
after the calls stop.
Dr
Windmill said: "Because the moth cleverly tunes its ear to enhance its detection
of bats, we must now question whether the bat in turn modifies its calls to avoid
detection by the moth. In view of the vast diversity of bat calls, this is only
to be expected.
"To
date, this phenomenon has not been reported for insects or, in fact, for any other
hearing system in the animal kingdom. These findings change our understanding
of the co-evolution of bats and moths and have implications for the hearing of
many other animals."
It
has been known for over 50 years that moths can hear the ultrasonic hunting calls
of their nocturnal predator, the bat. Previously it was thought that these ears
were only partially sensitive to the sound frequencies commonly used by bats and
that bats would make their hunting calls inaudible to moths.
But
now it appears that even though moth ears are among the simplest in the insect
world they have only two or four vibration sensitive cells attached to
a small eardrum moths are not as deaf as previously thought.
As
a bat gets closer to the moth, both the loudness and frequency (pitch) of the
bat's calls increase. Surprisingly, the sensitivity of the moth's ear to the bat's
calls also increases. This occurs because the moth's ear dynamically becomes more
sensitive to the frequencies that many bats use when attacking moths.
This
multidisciplinary work involved engineers, biologists and physicists; biological
measurements are accompanied by a mathematical model explaining the basis for
the unconventional behaviour of the moth's ear.