Money and Finance
Sonar wars in the night skies
When the idea struck him, he had already spent a decade studying moths' sound-producing structures, called tymbal organs, and how moths use sound to communicate with one another in courtship. From there, it was natural to ease into moths' communication with their predators.
Conner began to study bats and moths together and learned that just like military aircraft, at least one species of tiger moth can jam enemy sonar by producing a sound at the right frequency. Moths, of course, found it first.
Jamming sonar means the moths interfere with their enemies' fine-tuned way of bouncing sound off objects to navigate. However, the B. trigona moth seems to thwart its enemy, the bat, every time, and the military still can't claim that rate for foiling anti-aircraft missiles. Conner has only studied the one type of moth but has never seen a moth get eaten after producing the high frequency racket. So can the military learn a thing or two from a moth?
Maybe so, says Conner. He and graduate student Aaron Corcoran study how the signals produced by bats and moths have evolved, and by turns eclipsed each other, throughout their predator/prey history. For now, this steely grey tiger moth - dappled with orange to befit its name - has the advantage. While the military toys with one frequency or another in electronic jamming, the tiger moth easily sounds just the right frequency or mix of frequencies to avoid the bat's jaws.
"This is the first incidence of prey jamming a predator's sonar," said Corcoran. "There are a number of parallels to human military strategies. These animals have likely been using this strategy for millions of years, predating human technologies." The study was published recently in the journal Science.
After time spent in Wake Forest University bat facilities, the team has determined that the moth isn't simply warning the bat away or startling the bat out of a meal. No, they think the moth's distinctive ultrasonic clicking, which sounds to the human ear like the quick back-and-forth wiggling of a zipper, causes the bat to hear double or interrupted echoes when trying to locate prey. Ultimately, this means miscalculating the moth's location and losing the snack. But the team still really doesn't know how the clicking works.
Steve Nowicki, a Duke University animal communication expert who is not involved in the study, says that grasping how conversation systems work within and without a species, from the inch-long tiger moth to the flat-faced bat, is important for more than military technology.
"Communication is fundamentally a biological problem. By understanding how animals communicate, we might get some glimpses into the origin of our own language and therefore what it means to be human," Nowicki said.
....................
Another interesting science article from today: Self-cloning tree is 13,000 years old
-
Links
A Dozen Things Learned from Sam Zell about Investing and Business (LINK) [I've also recently begun to read a review copy of Tren Griffin's book on Charlie Munger, which will be released next month. It is fantastic. As always, you can pre-order...
-
We Need A Modern Origin Story: A Big History
Link to: Edge #441 - A Conversation With David Christian In modern science, and I include the humanities here, science in a German sense of science—rigorous scholarship across all domains—in modern science we've gotten used to the idea...
-
Baltasar Gracián Quote
"One of life’s great lessons lies in knowing how to refuse, and it is even more important to refuse yourself, both to business and to others. There are certain inessential activities—moths of precious time—and it is worse to busy yourself with the...
-
Mice Sing To Impress The Girls, Scientists Find
Male house mice produce melodious songs to attract mates, not unlike many birds, according to new research. The ditties are too high-pitched for human hearing, but scientists at Vienna's University of Veterinary Medicine analyzed them and found they...
-
Squid And Octopus Switch On Camouflage
Found via the RDFRS. Scientists have discovered how two marine creatures are able to rapidly "switch" their colours - from transparent to reddish brown. The species, an octopus and a squid, use their adaptable camouflage to cope with changing light conditions...
Money and Finance