4.5 Article

High duty cycle moth sounds jam bat echolocation: bats counter with compensatory changes in buzz duration

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 225, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.244187

Keywords

KEY WORDS; Jamming behavior; Biosonar; Duty cycle; Eptesicus fuscus; Bertholdia trigona; Arctiinae

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Wake Forest University
  3. [IOS 0951160]
  4. [DBI-1811897]

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Little is known about the minimum duty cycle of tiger moth signals for sonar jamming. The ability to jam the bat's sonar is a continuous function of duty cycle. Bats compensate for sonar jamming by lengthening the duration of their terminal buzz, resulting in a higher success rate in capturing moths.
Tiger moth species vary greatly in the number of clicks they produce and the resultant duty cycle. Signals with higher duty cycles are expected to more effectively interfere with bat sonar. However, little is known about the minimum duty cycle of tiger moth signals for sonar jamming. Is there a threshold that allows us to classify moths as acoustically aposematic versus sonar jammers based on their duty cycles? We performed playback experiments with three wild-caught adult male bats, Eptesicus fuscus. Bat attacks on tethered moths were challenged using acoustic signals of Bertholdia tngona with modified duty cycles ranging from 0 to 46%. We did not find evidence for a duty cycle threshold; rather, the ability to jam the bat's sonar was a continuous function of duty cycle consistent with a steady increase in the number of clicks arriving during a critical signal processing time window just prior to the arrival of an echo. The proportion of successful captures significantly decreased as the moth duty cycle increased. Our findings suggest that moths cannot be unambiguously classified as acoustically aposematic or sonar jammers based solely on duty cycle. Bats appear to compensate for sonar jamming by lengthening the duration of their terminal buzz and they are more successful in capturing moths when they do so. In contrast to previous findings for bats performing difficult spatial tasks, the number of sonar sound groups decreased in response to high duty cycles and did not affect capture success.

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