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Science Quickly

Moths Have an Acoustic Invisibility Cloak to Stay under Bats' Radar

Science Quickly

Scientific American

Science

4.31.4K Ratings

🗓️ 21 July 2021

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

New research finds they fly around on noise-cancelling wings

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Scientific Americans' 60-Second Science.

0:06.2

I'm Karen Hopkins.

0:08.0

Bats use echolocation to hunt for their meals, and moths are often on the menu.

0:16.0

But in the acoustic arms race between predator and prey, moths also have a trick or two

0:21.0

up their sleeve, or actually on their wings.

0:24.7

As a new study shows, that moth wings are covered with scales that absorb sound, particularly

0:30.6

the ultrasonic variety preferred by bats.

0:33.8

So moth and butterfly wings are covered in layers of scales.

0:38.0

These are made of a naturally occurring polymer called chitin, which is a polymer that you find

0:42.8

in most insect and crustacean exoskeletons.

0:46.4

That's Thomas Neil of the University of Bristol.

0:49.0

He started out by bombarding bits of moth wings with sound and seeing what bounced back.

0:54.8

We discovered that moth scales actually resonate in response to being hit with ultrasound,

0:59.8

and they resonate at frequencies that pretty much perfectly match the frequencies that bats

1:04.6

use for echolocation.

1:06.7

That vibration converts sound energy to mechanical energy, which muffles the echo that gets

1:11.9

back to the bats.

1:13.5

That probably hasn't happened by accident that these scales are such a shape and size

1:17.1

that they're resonating at just the right frequencies that they could absorb sound energy

1:21.3

from hunting bats.

1:22.7

Next, Neil and his colleagues modeled the sound dampening capabilities of an array of

1:28.1

different scales.

...

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