Phylogenies, fossils and functional genes: the evolution of echolocation in bats
人体回声定位
生物
生物
进化生物学
声学
古生物学
物理
自然(考古学)
神经科学
作者
Emma C. Teeling,Serena E. Dool,Mark S. Springer
出处
期刊:Cambridge University Press eBooks [Cambridge University Press] 日期:2012-03-29卷期号:: 1-22被引量:41
标识
DOI:10.1017/cbo9781139045599.002
摘要
Bats are one of the most successful orders of mammals on this planet. They account for over 20% of living mammalian diversity (~ 1200 species), and are distributed throughout the globe, absent only from the extreme latitudes (Simmons, 2005). Bats are the only living mammals that are capable of true self-powered flight, and likewise they are the only mammals capable of sophisticated laryngeal echolocation (Macdonald, 2006). Their global success is largely attributed to these novel adaptations (Jones and Teeling, 2006). Echolocation occurs when a bat emits a brief laryngeal-generated sound that can vary in duration (0.3–300 ms) and in frequency (8–210 kHz) and interprets the returning echoes to perceive its environment (Fenton and Bell, 1981; Thomas et al., 2004). Calls and echoes can be separated either in time or in frequency (Jones, 2005). Some bats (e.g., horseshoe bats, leaf-nosed bats and mustached bats) emit long constant-frequency calls with Doppler shift compensation (CF/DSC) by taking the velocity of their flight into account and adjusting the frequency of their outgoing calls to ensure that the incoming echoes return at a specific frequency (Thomas et al., 2004; Jones, 2005). Most other bats emit low-duty-cycle frequency-modulated calls, and separate outgoing calls and incoming echoes temporally (Thomas et al., 2004; Jones, 2005).