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746 Lecture 2 Echolocation in Bats. Aim nOutline properties of sound nHunting behaviour of bats nTypes of Echolocation sounds nSpecialisation of u Ear.

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Presentation on theme: "746 Lecture 2 Echolocation in Bats. Aim nOutline properties of sound nHunting behaviour of bats nTypes of Echolocation sounds nSpecialisation of u Ear."— Presentation transcript:

1 746 Lecture 2 Echolocation in Bats

2 Aim nOutline properties of sound nHunting behaviour of bats nTypes of Echolocation sounds nSpecialisation of u Ear u CNS nAuditory behaviour of moths

3 Properties of sound nSound is wave of rarefaction and compression has speed 330m/s, c = f * wavelength  - determines whether objects will reflect or diffract sound nfrequency f nintensity - u measured in dB

4 Harmonics nmultiples of frequency nusually less intense

5 Hunting behaviour of bats Taphozous Pipistrellus Megaderma Hipposideros

6 Echolocation sounds nall bats use “ultrasonic” sounds nCF - u constant frequency u long tone, often with some harmonics u velocity nFM - u frequency modulated u short burst of sound u range determination

7 CF in free air

8 FM nnear ground or vegetation

9 CF-FM nCF then droop ndepends on place

10 Landing - Rhinopoma

11 catching - Myotis

12 What will bat hear? nitself ? nreflection ? u quieter u more variable? u Doppler shift in frequency ?

13 Doppler shift (i) nemitted sound

14 Doppler shift (ii) nReflected sound sometimes in phase and sometimes out of phase in out

15 Doppler shift (iii) nIf reflected and emitted sound have similar intensity, Doppler echo will generate beats nProduction of new frequency from old!

16 Doppler summary nNew frequency – depends on ratio of outgoing sound and incoming sound nIncoming sound is reflected off ground/trees nDifference in frequency therefore tells how fast the bat is flying nf new = f out (v + s)/v u v speed of sound u s speed of bat

17 Echoes nFrom stationary insect u head on- symmetrical u sideways on asymmetric Echoes from fixed Tipula

18 Moving Tipula

19 Summary so far nUltrasonic sound u CF FM u habitat dependent nEchoes return information u moving insects u time to return u frequency spectrum F shifted F broadened

20 Behaviour to physiology nSpecialisation of u Ear u CNS

21 Human ear

22 Bat ear (i) nLarge pinnae u directional sensitivity u extra gain nTragus u elevation

23 Bat ears (ii) nmiddle ear muscles u reduce sensitivity while emitting? flying bat

24 Bat ear (iii) nMore of cochlea tuned to high frequencies than in other mammals

25 Tuning curve nauditory nerve u tuned to “best” frequency of emitted CF u actually to just above (Why?)

26 CF lowered in flight nDoppler shift as fly towards object raises return sound frequency

27 CNS outline AC IC CN

28 CNS nAuditory cortex neurons sensitive to pairs of stimuli u load/quiet u delay time crucial u time map

29 mechanisms of delay ncoincidence detection u inhibition of sound u delay line F slow axon F synapse ncontrol with vocalisation u inferior colliculus neurons respond only 30/40ms after vocalisation

30 Summary - audition nEar and CNS both highly specialised u more sensitive to ultrasonic frequencies u achieve increase in sensitivity to echo u respond to pairs of stimuli

31 Moth Auditory system n2 axons in ear low and high threshold

32 Behaviour nlow threshold - fly fast nhigh threshold - stop flying and fall u ?like a leaf nEmit clicks - u jam bat sonar - phantom echo returns at wrong time? u warning of unpalatability? u moths ( Euproctis ) emit clicks in mimicry of distasteful moths

33 Conclusion nco-evolution of bats and moths ndefence reactions u escape u auditory camouflage u auditory


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