
Bats adjust their
'Field-of-view'
Use of biosonar is more advanced than thought:
A new study reveals that the way fruit bats use biosonar to 'see'
their surroundings is significantly more advanced than first thought.

The study, published Sept. 13 in the online, open access journal PLoS
Biology, examines Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus), which use
echolocation to orient inside their caves and to find fruit hidden in
the branches of trees. Their high-frequency clicks form a sonar beam
that spreads across a fan-shaped area, and the returning echoes allow
them to locate and identify objects in that region. As these bats were
considered to have little control over their vocalizations, scientists
have puzzled over how they are able to navigate through complex
environments.
The research team, led by Nachum Ulanovsky of the Weizmann Institute
in Israel and Cynthia Moss of the University of Maryland, reports that
these bats adapt to environmental complexity using two tactics. First,
they alter the width of their sonar beam, similar to the way humans can
adjust their spotlight of attention in order to spot, for example, a
friend in a crowded room. Second, they modify the intensity of their
emissions.
"The work presented here reveals a new parameter under adaptive
control in bat echolocation," says Ulanovsky.
Ulanovsky
and his team trained five Egyptian fruit bats to locate and land on a
mango-sized plastic sphere placed in various locations in a large, dark
room equipped with an array of 20 microphones that recorded
vocalizations. In one set of experiments, the researchers simulated an
obstacle-filled forest by surrounding the sphere with two nets spread
between four poles. To reach the target, the bats flew through a narrow
corridor whose width and orientation varied from trial to trial.
In the obstacle-filled environment, the bats covered three times as
much area with each pair of clicks as they did when the obstacles
weren't there.
The angle separating each two beams was also wider and the volume of
the clicks louder, and these differences became more pronounced as they
drew further into the corridor and therefore closer to their obstacles.
This larger 'field of view' allowed the bats to track the sphere and
the poles simultaneously, and avoid collisions while landing.
"This is the first report, in any sensory system, of an active
increase in field-of-view in response to changes in environmental
complexity," says Ulanovsky.
Although these new findings may be unique to Egyptian fruit bats
because of their rapid tongue movements, Ulanovsky explains that their
results "suggest that active sensing of space by animals can be much
more sophisticated than previously thought -- and they call for a
re-examination of current theories of spatial orientation and
perception."
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