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Her odours make him deaf: crossmodal modulation of olfaction and hearing in a male moth

Author

Summary, in English

All animals have to cope with sensory conflicts arising from simultaneous input of incongruent data to different sensory modalities. Nocturnal activity in moths includes mate-finding behaviour by odour detection and bat predator avoidance by acoustic detection. We studied male moths that were simultaneously exposed to female sex pheromones indicating the presence of a potential mate, and artificial bat cries simulating a predation risk. We show that stimulation of one sensory modality can modulate the response to information from another, suggesting that behavioural thresholds are dynamic and depend on the behavioural context. The tendency to respond to bat sounds decreased as the quality and/or the amount of sex pheromone increased. The behavioural threshold for artificial bat cries increased by up to 40 dB when male moths where simultaneously exposed to female sex pheromones. As a consequence, a male moth that has detected the pheromone plume from a female will not try to evade an approaching bat until the bat gets close, hence incurring increased predation risk. Our results suggest that male moths' reaction to sensory conflicts is a trade-off depending on the relative intensity of the input to CNS from the two sensory modalities.

Publishing year

2005

Language

English

Pages

595-601

Publication/Series

Journal of Experimental Biology

Volume

208

Issue

4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

The Company of Biologists Ltd

Topic

  • Biological Sciences
  • Zoology

Status

Published

Research group

  • Pheromone Group

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1477-9145