Does bat response to traffic noise support the misleading cue hypothesis?

Author:

Geipel Inga12ORCID,Amin Bawan13,Page Rachel A1,Halfwerk Wouter4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado, Balboa, Panamá, República de Panamá

2. Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, Institute for Advanced Study, Wallotstraße, Berlin, Germany

3. Institute of Biology, Leiden University, RA Leiden, the Netherlands

4. Department of Ecological Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan, HV Amsterdam, the Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract The world has become a noisier place due to the increase in urbanization. Noise is generally considered an impediment, altering an animal’s behavior through masking or distraction. But noise can also provide useful information about the environment. For animals that rely on natural environmental noise as an indicator of favorable foraging conditions, increasing levels of anthropogenic noise might mislead informed decision-making. Bats use rain noise, a natural environmental cue, to delay their emergence from the roost, presumably to avoid sensory and metabolic costs associated with foraging in heavy rain. Here we tested the “misleading cue hypothesis,” asking whether traffic noise is mistaken for rain noise by bats. Given the acoustic similarity between rain noise and traffic noise, we predicted that bats would confuse the two. We conducted a playback experiment using rain, traffic, and ambient noise at natural roosts of common big-eared bats (Micronycteris microtis, Phyllostomidae) and recorded bat emergence behavior. In contrast to their response to rain noise, the bats did not delay roost emergence in response to traffic noise. Thus, we found that bats were able to discriminate between traffic noise and rain noise and were not misled by similarity in acoustic parameters in the two noise types, when emerging from their roost. Emerging bats did show more exploration flights during traffic noise than during rain noise, but not during ambient noise, suggesting that they perceive traffic noise as a novel acoustic cue. Our data provide new insights into perception of traffic noise by bats.

Funder

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

STRI

Tupper Postdoctoral Fellowship

Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin

LUF International Study Fund

LISF

Holland Scholarship

Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research

NOW

Veni

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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