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Sound Matters: Sex And Death In The Rain Forest

A white-throated round-eared bat (<em>Tonatia silvicola</em>) catches — and munches — a katydid on Barro Colorado Island in Panama. Katydids are "the potato chips of the rain forest," scientists say.
Christian Ziegler/ Minden Pictures
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Getty Images
A white-throated round-eared bat (Tonatia silvicola) catches — and munches — a katydid on Barro Colorado Island in Panama. Katydids are "the potato chips of the rain forest," scientists say.

A rain forest sings with the sounds of insects, birds, maybe a howler monkey or two. But scientists are discovering that some forest dwellers also communicate in ways humans usually can't hear — via ultrasound.

A team from Dartmouth College has recorded these signals in treetops on a pristine Panamanian island called Barro Colorado, and slowed them down to make sense of them.

The ultrasonic chatter, it turns out, is actually a complicated conversation between mating insects and the bats that aim to eat them.

The insects are katydids, cousins to locusts and grasshoppers, which make their calls by rubbing their wings together. Some types live in North America, but the variety is nothing compared to the 250 or so species that live in Panama, where some behemoths are the size of a cell phone, and others are almost microscopic.

Panama's katydids come in all sizes. The big one on the left is a <em>Steirodon careovirgulatum</em>. The little one is likely a new species for Panama. Biologist Sharon Martinson has tentatively named it <em>Pycnopalpa sincordata</em>.
/ Courtesy of Sharon Martinson
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Courtesy of Sharon Martinson
Panama's katydids come in all sizes. The big one on the left is a Steirodon careovirgulatum. The little one is likely a new species for Panama. Biologist Sharon Martinson has tentatively named it Pycnopalpa sincordata.

Many look like they're in a Halloween costume, with funny looking helmet-heads or big horns.

Hungry bats find them all irresistible.

"Katydids are the potato chips of the rainforest," says Laurel Symes, a biologist at Dartmouth College. The hungry bats listen for the ultrasonic calls of the katydids, then use their own ultrasonic signals to locate the insects, much the way ships use sonar to find objects beneath the sea.

Dartmouth biologists Sharon Martinson (left) and Laurel Symes (right) planted audio recorders high up in trees to gather hours of recordings.
/ Courtesy of Sharon Martinson
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Courtesy of Sharon Martinson
Dartmouth biologists Sharon Martinson (left) and Laurel Symes (right) planted audio recorders high up in trees to gather hours of recordings.

Now, you'd think katydids would just shut up and save themselves. But males have to signal. It's how they attract females.

The Dartmouth team has spotted some interesting ways that katydids evolved to find mates but also fool bats — to navigate the tricky soundscape between sex and death.

"What's cool about the katydids," says Dartmouth biologist Hannah ter Hofstede, is that "each species may have found a different way to resolve that conflict."

Katydids, she says, have a special organ in their necks, just above and between their front legs. It's just a clump of cells, "a white blob," she says. But it acts as a minibrain.

Using tiny recording electrodes inserted into the minibrain, ter Hofstede has confirmed that it responds to ultrasonic signals, either from another insect or from a bat, that the katydid hears.

But her big question was, how do katydids use their ultrasonic sensory system in the real world — in the rain forest? To figure that out, she and her team traveled to Panama and wired up a rain forest with special microphones that record ultrasound.

Their project required weeks of shooting ropes over branches, climbing into the canopy and setting up an array of high-tech gear. They accumulated hours and hours of recordings, and noted an eerie babble, most of it in the ultrasonic range. To make sense of it, they lowered the frequency — in essence, slowing the conversations down to the point where the human ear can easily hear them.

Symes decoded it for us: "So this really low, continuous sound is the sound of crickets," she explains. "But all of these short, higher pitched sounds — the things that are two pulses or one short pulse, or maybe just a really short trill of sound — most of that is katydid calls. And then the really high-pitched regular sound, is the sound of the bat flying through."

There were some surprises.

"I think what I find the most interesting about the katydids," says ter Hofstede, "is how much they have adapted to deal with these kinds of predators. So, one of the things is that they don't produce very much sound." Some species only call for mates a few times a night, the scientists noticed, which makes them less vulnerable to bats, but also lowers their chances of finding a mate.

And some species apparently recognize a bat signal and go quiet when they hear it. Others just keep calling because they live underneath leaves and are harder for bats to find.

"So the more we investigated," says ter Hofstede, "the more complicated everything gets. And these katydids are not solving the same problem in the same way. They're all solving these problems in different ways."

All this variation comes from a brain the size of a grain of rice.

"But they're capable of processing a lot of this information and basically coming to decisions," says ter Hofstede. They apparently have neural circuits, she says, "related to recognizing certain signals as being important for being a mate or being a bat."

Symes finds that sort of discernment an admirable product of natural selection.

"They live in an environment where there might be a hundred different species that make sound," she says. "And they have to find this particular sound within it."

NPR contributor Bill McQuay is an audio producer at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. He's on Twitter: @mcquay_bill.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Christopher Joyce is a correspondent on the science desk at NPR. His stories can be heard on all of NPR's news programs, including NPR's Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Weekend Edition.
Bill McQuay is an audio producer with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. For fifteen years McQuay was an NPR sound engineer and technical director for NPR programs including Morning Edition, Weekend Saturday and Sunday, Performance Today and NPR's Radio Expeditions. Radio Expeditions is where McQuay began his long time collaboration with NPR science correspondent Christopher Joyce, a creative relationship that continues today.