Communicative & Integrative Biology (Jan 2019)

The jamming avoidance response in echolocating bats

  • Te K. Jones,
  • William E. Conner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19420889.2019.1568818
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 10 – 13

Abstract

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Bats face many sources of acoustic interference in their natural environments, including other bats and potential prey items that affect their ability to interpret the returning echoes of their biosonar signals. To be able to navigate and forage successfully, bats must be able to counteract this interference and one of the ways they achieve this is by altering the various parameters of their echolocation. We describe these changes in signal design within the context of a modified definition of the jamming avoidance response originally applied to the signal changes of weakly electric fish. Both of these groups use active sensory systems that exhibit similarities in function but we take this opportunity to highlight major differences each groups’ response to signal interference. These discrepancies form the basis of our need for an expanded description of the jamming avoidance response in echolocating bats.

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