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Toothed whales have evolved flexible biosonar systems to find, track and capture prey in diverse habitats. Delphinids, phocoenids and iniids adjust inter-click intervals and source levels gradually while approaching prey. In contrast, deep-diving beaked and sperm whales maintain relatively constant inter-click intervals and apparent output levels during the approach followed by a rapid transition into the foraging buzz, presumably to maintain a long-range acoustic scene in a multi-target environment. However, it remains unknown whether this rapid biosonar adjustment strategy is shared by delphinids foraging in deep waters. To test this, we investigated biosonar adjustments of a deep-diving delphinid, the Risso's dolphin (). We analyzed inter-click interval and apparent output level adjustments recorded from sound recording tags to quantify sensory adjustment during prey capture attempts. Risso's dolphins did not follow typical (20log) biosonar adjustment patterns seen in shallow-water species, but instead maintained stable repetition rates and output levels up to the foraging buzz. Our results suggest that maintaining a long-range acoustic scene to exploit complex, multi-target prey layers is a common strategy amongst deep-diving toothed whales. Risso's dolphins transitioned rapidly into the foraging buzz just like beaked whales during most foraging attempts, but employed a more gradual biosonar adjustment in a subset (19%) of prey approaches. These were characterized by higher speeds and minimum specific acceleration, indicating higher prey capture efforts associated with evasive prey. Thus, tracking and capturing evasive prey using biosonar may require a more gradual switch between multi-target echolocation and single-target tracking.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.216283 | DOI Listing |
J Exp Biol
March 2025
Zoophysiology, Department of Biology, Aarhus University, C. F. Møllers Allé 3, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
Ultrasonic cavitation noise from fast vessels overlaps spectrally with echolocation clicks of toothed whales and therefore has the potential to degrade echolocation performance through auditory masking of returning echoes. Here, we tested that hypothesis by exposing two trained echolocating porpoises carrying DTAGs to two different levels of decidecade noise centered on 2 kHz (non-masking) and 125 kHz (masking) during an active target discrimination task. We found no click level adjustments or effects on discrimination performance in trials with non-masking noise or low-level masking noise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
February 2025
Department of Biology, University of Toronto, 3359 Mississauga Road, Mississauga, ON L5L 1C6, Canada. Electronic address:
Moving animals must gather information at sufficient rates, detail, and range relative to their velocity while filtering this information to that essential for a given task. Echolocators, because of their active sensory system, are exceptional models for investigating how animals filter and adjust information flow to motor patterns. During airborne prey capture, bats adjust echolocation and, by extension, how they probe for information in distance- and context-dependent ways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Biol
January 2025
Department of Biology, Section of Zoophysiology, Aarhus University, Aarhus, 8000, Denmark.
Background: Echolocating bats face an intense arms race with insect prey that can detect bat calls and initiate evasive maneuvers. Their high closing speeds and short biosonar ranges leave bats with only a few 100 ms between detection and capture, suggesting a reactive sensory-motor operation that might preclude tracking of escaping prey. Here we test this hypothesis using greater mouse-eared bats (Myotis myotis) as a model species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioinspir Biomim
December 2024
National Key Laboratory of Underwater Acoustic Technology, Harbin Engineering University, Harbin 15001, People's Republic of China.
Curr Biol
July 2024
Faculty of Life and Medical Sciences, Doshisha University, 1-3 Tatara Miyakodani, Kyotanabe, Kyoto 610-0321, Japan.
The ability of "target tracking," such as keeping a target object in sight, is crucial for various activities. However, most sensing systems experience a certain degree of delay due to information processing, which challenges accurate target tracking. The long history of studies on animal behavior has revealed several tactics for it, although a systematic understanding of how individual tactics are combined into a strategy has not been reached.
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