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Home >> Online Business, Promotion and Marketing

How The Moths Fool Bats
By: Ruel Hinaloc

A moth is an insect closely related to the butterfly, both beings of the order Lepidoptera. The differences between butterflies and moths are more than just taxonomy. The reality is that butterflies are a small group that arose from within the "moths" and there is thus no way to group all the remaining taxa in a monophyletic group, as it will always exclude that one descendant lineage.

octurnal insectivores often feed on moths; these include some bats, some species of owls and other species of birds. Moths are also eaten by some species of lizards, cats, dogs, rodents, and some bears. Moth larvae are vulnerable to being parasitized by Ichneumonidae.

Baculovirus are a parasite double-stranded DNA insect viruses that are used mostly as biological control agents. They are members of the Baculoviridae, a family that is restricted to insects. Most baculovirus isolates to have been obtained from insects, in particular from Lepidoptera.

Bats enjoy a meal of moths and use their sonar equipment to catch them. Even so, a moth’s detection system is a highly sophisticated warning device that gives moth's time to fly for cover. Bats locate moths by sending out ultrasonic chirps and the echoes tell them whether a moth is in reach or not.

This device works to well up to about ten feet, but beyond that, the echo grows too faint for the bat to make good use of it. On the other hand, the moth can hear the bat’s chirp about 75 feet away. So whenever the moth picks up the bat’s signal, it flies away from the sound’s source and out of the bat’s reach. Nevertheless, within ten feet the moth has to do some quick maneuvering.

Sometimes it dives for the ground. At times it simply folds its wings and drops. At other times, it may use dive power, or it may spiral down. Some moths taste bad to bats. These bad-tasting moths let out a strong clicking sound in flight. Hearing this “click,” the bat stops its pursuit at once.

The good-tasting moths, however, will disguise themselves by sending an ultrasonic “click” to confuse the bat. The frustrated bat will not give chase. However, what the bat does not know is that among the loudest “clickers” are the tastiest moths.

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