Echolocating toothed whales use ultra-fast echo-kinetic responses to track evasive prey ...

Visual predators rely on fast-acting optokinetic responses to track and capture agile prey. Most toothed whales, however, rely on echolocation for hunting and have converged on biosonar clicking rates reaching 500/s during prey pu rsuits. If echoes are processed on a click by click basis, as assumed...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vance, Heather, Madsen, Peter, Aguilar De Soto, Natacha, Wisniewska, Danuta, Ladegaard, Michael, Hooker, Sascha, Johnson, Mark
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.n8pk0p2w1
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.n8pk0p2w1
Description
Summary:Visual predators rely on fast-acting optokinetic responses to track and capture agile prey. Most toothed whales, however, rely on echolocation for hunting and have converged on biosonar clicking rates reaching 500/s during prey pu rsuits. If echoes are processed on a click by click basis, as assumed, neural responses 100x faster than those in vision are required to keep pace with this information flow. Using high resolution bio-logging of wild predator prey interactions we show that toothed whales adjust clicking rates to track prey movement within 50 200 ms of prey escape responses. Hypothesising that these stereotyped biosonar adjustments are elicited by sudden prey accelerations, we measured echo kinetic responses from trained harb our porpoises to a moving target and found similar latencies. High biosonar sampling rates are, therefore, not supported by extreme speeds of neural processing and muscular responses. Instead, the neuro kinetic response times in echolocation are similar to those of tracking ... : See 'Materials and Methods' section of Vance et al (2021). ...