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      Interindividual communication by bats via echolocation

      1 , 2
      Canadian Journal of Zoology
      Canadian Science Publishing

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          Abstract

          The majority of over 1400 species of bats produce echolocation calls of diverse designs as a means of obtaining information about their surroundings, including the presence of prey. These calls also have the potential to contain information about the caller that can be used by other bats. We review the evidence for information transfer from echolocating bats to intended or unintended conspecifics and heterospecifics. Analysis of call structure and playback experiments on over 50 species in 11 families demonstrate that information regarding the species, population, sex, age, size, and individual identity of the caller is often contained within the calls, and in some cases can be recognized and used by other individuals. Intentional or unintentional (eavesdropping) communication occurs in feeding and roosting situations, as well as between individuals in social interactions such as in mate choice and between mothers and young. We also assess limitations of the research to date and suggest avenues for future research.

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          Most cited references117

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          Recognition of Species of Insectivorous Bats by Their Echolocation Calls

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            Flexible bat echolocation: the influence of individual, habitat and conspecifics on sonar signal design

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              Bats aggregate to improve prey search but might be impaired when their density becomes too high.

              Social foraging is a very common yet extremely complex behavior. Numerous studies attempted to model it with little supporting evidence. Studying it in the wild is difficult because it requires monitoring the animal's movement, its foraging success, and its interactions with conspecifics. We present a novel system that enables full night ultrasonic recording of freely foraging bats, in addition to GPS tracking. As they rely on echolocation, audio recordings of bats allow tapping into their sensory acquisition of the world. Rapid changes in echolocation allowed us to reveal the bats' dynamic reactions in response to prey or conspecifics—two key behaviors that are extremely difficult to assess in most animals. We found that bats actively aggregate and forage as a group. However, we also found that when the group became too dense, bats were forced to devote sensory attention to conspecifics that frequently entered their biosonar "field of view," impairing the bats' prey detection performance. Why then did bats fly in such high densities? By emitting echolocation calls, bats constantly provide public information about their detection of prey. Bats could therefore benefit from intentionally flying at a distance that enables eavesdropping on conspecifics. Group foraging, therefore, probably allowed bats to effectively operate as an array of sensors, increasing their searching efficiency. We suggest that two opposing forces are at play in determining the efficient foraging density: on the one hand, higher densities improve prey detection, but on the other hand, they increase conspecific interference.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Canadian Journal of Zoology
                Can. J. Zool.
                Canadian Science Publishing
                0008-4301
                1480-3283
                March 01 2023
                March 01 2023
                : 101
                : 3
                : 128-143
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biological Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
                [2 ]Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa
                Article
                10.1139/cjz-2022-0121
                11c7fef0-4dbd-4c25-800f-4e56d1850b89
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en_GB

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