Coordinated Control of Acoustical Field of View and Flight in Three-Dimensional Space for Consecutive Capture by Echolocating Bats during Natural Foraging.

Echolocating bats prey upon small moving insects in the dark using sophisticated sonar techniques. The direction and directivity pattern of the ultrasound broadcast of these bats are important factors that affect their acoustical field of view, allowing us to investigate how the bats control their a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Miwa Sumiya, Emyo Fujioka, Kazuya Motoi, Masaru Kondo, Shizuko Hiryu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5234808?pdf=render
id doaj-98cf95bbbe33402383b2bac0a7254d1f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-98cf95bbbe33402383b2bac0a7254d1f2020-11-25T01:30:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01121e016999510.1371/journal.pone.0169995Coordinated Control of Acoustical Field of View and Flight in Three-Dimensional Space for Consecutive Capture by Echolocating Bats during Natural Foraging.Miwa SumiyaEmyo FujiokaKazuya MotoiMasaru KondoShizuko HiryuEcholocating bats prey upon small moving insects in the dark using sophisticated sonar techniques. The direction and directivity pattern of the ultrasound broadcast of these bats are important factors that affect their acoustical field of view, allowing us to investigate how the bats control their acoustic attention (pulse direction) for advanced flight maneuvers. The purpose of this study was to understand the behavioral strategies of acoustical sensing of wild Japanese house bats Pipistrellus abramus in three-dimensional (3D) space during consecutive capture flights. The results showed that when the bats successively captured multiple airborne insects in short time intervals (less than 1.5 s), they maintained not only the immediate prey but also the subsequent one simultaneously within the beam widths of the emitted pulses in both horizontal and vertical planes before capturing the immediate one. This suggests that echolocating bats maintain multiple prey within their acoustical field of view by a single sensing using a wide directional beam while approaching the immediate prey, instead of frequently shifting acoustic attention between multiple prey. We also numerically simulated the bats' flight trajectories when approaching two prey successively to investigate the relationship between the acoustical field of view and the prey direction for effective consecutive captures. This simulation demonstrated that acoustically viewing both the immediate and the subsequent prey simultaneously increases the success rate of capturing both prey, which is considered to be one of the basic axes of efficient route planning for consecutive capture flight. The bat's wide sonar beam can incidentally cover multiple prey while the bat forages in an area where the prey density is high. Our findings suggest that the bats then keep future targets within their acoustical field of view for effective foraging. In addition, in both the experimental results and the numerical simulations, the acoustic sensing and flights of the bats showed narrower vertical ranges than horizontal ranges. This suggests that the bats control their acoustic sensing according to different schemes in the horizontal and vertical planes according to their surroundings. These findings suggest that echolocating bats coordinate their control of the acoustical field of view and flight for consecutive captures in 3D space during natural foraging.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5234808?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miwa Sumiya
Emyo Fujioka
Kazuya Motoi
Masaru Kondo
Shizuko Hiryu
spellingShingle Miwa Sumiya
Emyo Fujioka
Kazuya Motoi
Masaru Kondo
Shizuko Hiryu
Coordinated Control of Acoustical Field of View and Flight in Three-Dimensional Space for Consecutive Capture by Echolocating Bats during Natural Foraging.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Miwa Sumiya
Emyo Fujioka
Kazuya Motoi
Masaru Kondo
Shizuko Hiryu
author_sort Miwa Sumiya
title Coordinated Control of Acoustical Field of View and Flight in Three-Dimensional Space for Consecutive Capture by Echolocating Bats during Natural Foraging.
title_short Coordinated Control of Acoustical Field of View and Flight in Three-Dimensional Space for Consecutive Capture by Echolocating Bats during Natural Foraging.
title_full Coordinated Control of Acoustical Field of View and Flight in Three-Dimensional Space for Consecutive Capture by Echolocating Bats during Natural Foraging.
title_fullStr Coordinated Control of Acoustical Field of View and Flight in Three-Dimensional Space for Consecutive Capture by Echolocating Bats during Natural Foraging.
title_full_unstemmed Coordinated Control of Acoustical Field of View and Flight in Three-Dimensional Space for Consecutive Capture by Echolocating Bats during Natural Foraging.
title_sort coordinated control of acoustical field of view and flight in three-dimensional space for consecutive capture by echolocating bats during natural foraging.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Echolocating bats prey upon small moving insects in the dark using sophisticated sonar techniques. The direction and directivity pattern of the ultrasound broadcast of these bats are important factors that affect their acoustical field of view, allowing us to investigate how the bats control their acoustic attention (pulse direction) for advanced flight maneuvers. The purpose of this study was to understand the behavioral strategies of acoustical sensing of wild Japanese house bats Pipistrellus abramus in three-dimensional (3D) space during consecutive capture flights. The results showed that when the bats successively captured multiple airborne insects in short time intervals (less than 1.5 s), they maintained not only the immediate prey but also the subsequent one simultaneously within the beam widths of the emitted pulses in both horizontal and vertical planes before capturing the immediate one. This suggests that echolocating bats maintain multiple prey within their acoustical field of view by a single sensing using a wide directional beam while approaching the immediate prey, instead of frequently shifting acoustic attention between multiple prey. We also numerically simulated the bats' flight trajectories when approaching two prey successively to investigate the relationship between the acoustical field of view and the prey direction for effective consecutive captures. This simulation demonstrated that acoustically viewing both the immediate and the subsequent prey simultaneously increases the success rate of capturing both prey, which is considered to be one of the basic axes of efficient route planning for consecutive capture flight. The bat's wide sonar beam can incidentally cover multiple prey while the bat forages in an area where the prey density is high. Our findings suggest that the bats then keep future targets within their acoustical field of view for effective foraging. In addition, in both the experimental results and the numerical simulations, the acoustic sensing and flights of the bats showed narrower vertical ranges than horizontal ranges. This suggests that the bats control their acoustic sensing according to different schemes in the horizontal and vertical planes according to their surroundings. These findings suggest that echolocating bats coordinate their control of the acoustical field of view and flight for consecutive captures in 3D space during natural foraging.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5234808?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT miwasumiya coordinatedcontrolofacousticalfieldofviewandflightinthreedimensionalspaceforconsecutivecapturebyecholocatingbatsduringnaturalforaging
AT emyofujioka coordinatedcontrolofacousticalfieldofviewandflightinthreedimensionalspaceforconsecutivecapturebyecholocatingbatsduringnaturalforaging
AT kazuyamotoi coordinatedcontrolofacousticalfieldofviewandflightinthreedimensionalspaceforconsecutivecapturebyecholocatingbatsduringnaturalforaging
AT masarukondo coordinatedcontrolofacousticalfieldofviewandflightinthreedimensionalspaceforconsecutivecapturebyecholocatingbatsduringnaturalforaging
AT shizukohiryu coordinatedcontrolofacousticalfieldofviewandflightinthreedimensionalspaceforconsecutivecapturebyecholocatingbatsduringnaturalforaging
_version_ 1725089761658404864