Echolocating bats can adjust sensory acquisition based on internal cues

Author:

Boonman Arjan,Rieger Itai,Amichai EranORCID,Greif Stefan,Eitan Ofri,Goldshtein Aya,Yovel Yossi

Abstract

Abstract Background Sensory systems acquire both external and internal information to guide behavior. Adjustments based on external input are much better documented and understood than internal-based sensory adaptations. When external input is not available, idiothetic—internal—cues become crucial for guiding behavior. Here, we take advantage of the rapid sensory adjustments exhibited by bats in order to study how animals rely on internal cues in the absence of external input. Constant frequency echolocating bats are renowned for their Doppler shift compensation response used to adjust their emission frequency in order to optimize sensing. Previous studies documented the importance of external echoes for this response. Results We show that the Doppler compensation system works even without external feedback. Bats experiencing accelerations in an echo-free environment exhibited an intact compensation response. Moreover, using on-board GPS tags on free-flying bats in the wild, we demonstrate that the ability to perform Doppler shift compensation response based on internal cues might be essential in real-life when echo feedback is not available. Conclusions We thus show an ecological need for using internal cues as well as an ability to do so. Our results illustrate the robustness of one particular sensory behavior; however, we suggest this ability to rely on different streams of information (i.e., internal or external) is probably relevant for many sensory behaviors.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Plant Science,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Structural Biology,Biotechnology

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1. Ventral wing hairs provide tactile feedback for aerial prey capture in the big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus;Journal of Comparative Physiology A;2023-12-14

2. What determines the information update rate in echolocating bats;Communications Biology;2023-11-22

3. By a whisker: the sensory role of vibrissae in hovering flight in nectarivorous bats;Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-02

4. Doppler shift compensation performance in Hipposideros pratti across experimental paradigms;Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience;2022-08-01

5. Sensory error drives fine motor adjustment;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences;2022-06-27

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