沉默的声音:停止歌唱和歌声暂停是超声诱导的新头螽斯(直翅目)的声惊吓行为。螽斯科)。

P A Faure, R R Hoy
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引用次数: 83

摘要

先前对昆虫声惊吓的研究涉及行为和/或神经机制,用于逃避空中叫卖,回声定位蝙蝠;然而,昆虫也面临着陆地捕食者。在这里,我们描述了夜间蝈蝈的一种声惊吓反应,neoconcephalus ensiger。鸣叫的雄性在野外受到干扰时会表现出明显的反掠食者行为——停止歌唱、冻结、跳跃和逃避飞行。在受控的实验室条件下,我们发现停止唱歌和歌曲暂停是超声波特有的行为:当受到脉冲超声波(20-100千赫)而不是音频(< 20千赫)的刺激时,雄性停止呼唤配偶或在歌曲中插入停顿。影响声惊的第二个因素是刺激的阶段:只有当超声脉冲在发声音节之间的静默窗口到达时,声惊反应才会发生。平均惊吓阈值和反应潜伏期分别为70 +/- 5 dB SPL和34.2 +/- 6.0 ms。N. ensiger对于检查非飞行昆虫的声惊吓反应特别有用,因为(1)它的鸣叫是宽带的,包含超声波,因此可能存在对超声波生物学意义的混淆,(2)该物种在飞行时表现出经典的蝙蝠躲避反应,因此可以在同一物种内直接比较两种类型的声惊吓。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The sounds of silence: cessation of singing and song pausing are ultrasound-induced acoustic startle behaviors in the katydid Neoconocephalus ensiger (Orthoptera; Tettigoniidae).

Previous studies of acoustic startle in insects have dealt with behavioral and/or neural mechanisms employed in evading aerially hawking, echolocating bats; however, insects also face terrestrial predators. Here we describe an acoustic startle response of the nocturnal katydid, Neoconocephalus ensiger. Stridulating males disturbed in the field perform obvious antipredatory behaviors--cessation of singing, freezing, jumping, and evasive flight. Under controlled laboratory conditions we found that cessation of singing and song pausing are ultrasound-specific behaviors: when stimulated with pulsed ultrasound (20-100 kHz), but not audio-sound (< 20 kHz), males cease mate calling or insert pauses in their song. A second factor influencing acoustic startle is the phase of stimulation: an acoustic startle response occurs only when the pulse of ultrasound arrives during the window of silence between stridulatory syllables. The average startle threshold and response latency was 70 +/- 5 dB SPL and 34.2 +/- 6.0 ms, respectively. N. ensiger is particularly useful for examining acoustic startle responses of nonflying insects because (1) its calling song is broadband and contains ultrasound, thus the possibility exists of confusion over the biological meaning of ultrasound, and (2) this species shows the classic bat-avoidance response while flying, so a direct comparison between two types of acoustic startle is possible within the same species.

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