D.N.LAPSHIN, D.D. VORONTSOV
THE DEPENDENCE OF BEHAVIORAL AUDITORY THRESHOLDS ON THE DELAY OF ECHO-LIKE SIGNALS IN NOCTUID MOTHS (LEPIDOPTERA, NOCTUIDAE)
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The auditory system of noctuoid moths capable to respond to ultrasounds
has long been a model for anti-predator studies in neuroethology.
Many moths avoid hunting bats by listening for their echolocation calls
and taking evasive manoeuvres to escape predation. Besides these flight
defences, certain tiger moths (Arctiidae) emit high-frequency clicks
to jam the echolocator of an attacking bat. Another suggested function
for ultrasonic audition in moths along with their capability to emit
loud ultrasonic clicks was pulse echolocation. However, it seemed
difficult to arrange sufficient temporal resolution in a simple
invertebrate auditory system. Here we present an evidence of moth's
capability to perceive an echo following its own click with a very
short delay. The behavioral responses of moths to the acoustic pulses
imitating echoes of their own clicks were investigated under conditions
of tethered flight. It has been found that such echo-like stimulation
evokes an increase in average emission rateof own acoustic signals
in moths. Auditory thresholds were measured in two noctuid species
(Enargia paleacea Esp. and Blepharita satura Schiff.)
at stimulus delays 0.2, 0.3, 0.5 and 1 ms in relation to the respective
moth clicks. Our findings reveal the ability of these moths to perceive
echoes of their own signals, thus demonstrating potential possibility
for use of pulse echolocation.