Big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) successfully navigate through clutter after exposure to intense band-limited sound

Abstract

Echolocating big brown bats fly, orient, forage, and roost in cluttered acoustic environments in which aggregate sound pressure levels can be as intense as 100 to 140 dB SPL, levels that would impair auditory perception in other terrestrial mammals. We showed previously that bats exposed to intense wide-band sound (116 dB SPL) can navigate successfully through dense acoustic clutter. Here, we extend these results by quantifying performance of bats navigating through a cluttered scene after exposure to intense band-limited sounds (bandwidths 5–25 kHz, 123 dB SPL). Behavioral performance was not significantly affected by prior sound exposure, with the exception of one bat after exposure to one sound. Even in this outlying case, performance recovered rapidly, by 10 min post-exposure. Temporal patterning of biosonar emissions during successful flights showed that bats maintained their individual strategies for navigating through the cluttered scene before and after exposures. In unsuccessful flights, interpulse intervals were skewed towards shorter values, suggesting a shift in strategy for solving the task rather than a hearing impairment. Results confirm previous findings that big brown bats are not as susceptible to noise-induced perceptual impairments as are other terrestrial mammals exposed to sounds of similar intensity and bandwidth.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Sep 10, 2018
Source ID
10.1038/s41598-018-31872-x

Entities

People

  • Alexandra Ertman
  • Andrea Megela Simmons
  • James A Simmons
  • Kelsey N. Hom

Organizations

  • Office of Naval Research

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Aerospace Engineering
  • Auditory Neuroscience/Auditory Physiology.
  • Systems Analysis and Design