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Big Brown Bats Are Challenged by Acoustically-guided Flights Through a Circular Tunnel of Hoops

Overview
Journal Sci Rep
Specialty Science
Date 2020 Jan 23
PMID 31964933
Citations 2
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Abstract

Mines and caves provide essential roosting places for bats, but often they are obstructed to prevent entry by humans. To allow bats to access their roosts, metal corrugated culvert pipes are sometimes installed. Wildlife surveys indicate, however, that bats may abandon caves having corrugated culvert entrances. Culverts may be confusing to bats due to the complex patterns of echoes returned by the regular, ring-like corrugations. We tested the hypothesis that a circular tunnel composed of successive hoops is difficult for big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) to navigate. Experiments challenged bats with flights through a tunnel of round plastic hoops or a corridor flanked left and right by rows of plastic hanging chains. The bats swerved sideways and left the pathway on more flights in the hoop tunnel compared to only rarely in the chain corridor. Even during successful flights through the hoops, bats changed the temporal patterning of their echolocation pulses to compress them into more sonar sound groups. From prior research, this active reaction is an indicator of a perceptually more difficult task. To allow bats access to mines through culverts without affecting their echolocation behavior, smoothing or masking the regular corrugations inside with concrete may be effective.

Citing Articles

Spatiotemporal patterning of acoustic gaze in echolocating bats navigating gaps in clutter.

Tuninetti A, Ming C, Hom K, Simmons J, Simmons A iScience. 2021; 24(4):102353.

PMID: 33870143 PMC: 8047172. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.102353.


A simulation framework for bio-inspired sonar sensing with Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.

Tanveer M, Wu X, Thomas A, Ming C, Muller R, Tokekar P PLoS One. 2020; 15(11):e0241443.

PMID: 33141848 PMC: 7608878. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241443.

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