These animals can hear everything - Jakob Christensen-Dalsgaard

209,828 views ・ 2024-06-11

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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The world is always abuzz with sounds,
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many of which human ears simply can't hear.
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However, other species have extraordinary adaptations
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that grant them access to realms of sonic extremes.
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And some of them don’t even have ears— at least, not like we typically imagine.
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To understand how the animal kingdom’s best listeners do it,
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we need to know the rules of their game.
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When an object in a medium like air or water moves,
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it sends out physical waves.
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The basics of hearing involve structures that vibrate in response to these waves
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and excite sensory cells,
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generating signals that nerves transmit to the brain,
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where they’re processed.
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But despite the assemblage of sound-absorbing and -amplifying
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structures in our ears,
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many noises are too quiet for us to detect.
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Owls, however, have some workarounds.
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Our external ears funnel sounds inward—
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but many owls use their whole faces to do this.
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Their ears, hidden beneath a flap of feathers,
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have eardrums proportionally much larger and more sensitive than humans’.
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And because many owls ears are positioned asymmetrically,
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sound waves reach them at different times.
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This slight delay helps their brains determine the direction
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of the sound’s source.
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And great grey owl wings have especially thick velvety coatings
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and long feather combs and fringes,
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which are thought to help reduce their flight sounds.
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So, while hovering, they can go undetected
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and concentrate on the subtle sounds of their prey.
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All these adaptations enable a great grey owl to hear a vole
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tunneling under 18 inches of snow—
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and make a fatal strike.
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Other animals are almost all ears,
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like the aptly named long-eared jerboa,
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which is the animal kingdom’s largest ears in proportion to body length.
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These sizable sound-collectors help the jerboas sense low frequency noises—
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and keep cool by radiating heat.
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Fennec foxes use their large, swiveling ears
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to rapidly home in on activity beneath Sahara sands,
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while bat-eared foxes can pick up savanna sounds
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as slight as termites crawling and munching on grasses.
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Ogre-faced spiders, meanwhile,
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might not have ears in the traditional vertebrate sense,
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but their legs are covered by receptors sensitive to sound waves
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as soft as those generated by mosquito flight.
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This allows them to catch airborne prey—
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even after being blindfolded by scientists.
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Lots of different features also help animal ears hit especially high notes,
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like the extra hard, stiff middle ear bones of toothed whales;
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like dolphins and sperm whales,
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which efficiently propagate high-frequency vibrations.
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Indeed, some toothed whales and bats emit sound pulses around 200,000 hertz
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and listen for the reflections.
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These high-frequency wavelengths—
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more than 10 times higher than what we can hear—
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are small enough to generate strong reflections from objects
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as tiny as the insects many bats are after,
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which would be missed altogether by lower ones.
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But many insects are also in on the conversation—
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and vigilant to ultrasonic onslaughts.
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The greater wax moth can register the highest frequencies
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of any animal recorded— up to 300,000 hertz,
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thanks to thin, vibration-sensitive, eardrum-like membranes on their abdomens.
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In fact, hearing organs have evolved independently
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more than 20 times among insects.
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Katydids sense ultrasonic sounds with their front legs;
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certain hawkmoths can hear with their mouthparts;
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a parasitic fly registers cricket chirps from organs behind its head;
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and the praying mantis has just one hearing organ,
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which sits smack in the midline of its thorax.
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But how low can animals go?
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Well, baleen whales emit sounds around 14 hertz,
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the deepest among mammals.
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These vibrations can travel thousands of kilometers.
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And they get picked up by other baleen whales—
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possibly via their skulls,
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which conduct the vibrations along to their ear bones.
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Snakes pick up ground vibrations by way of their jawbones,
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which connect directly to their middle ear bones.
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And Namib Desert golden moles regularly stick their heads into the sand,
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which likely helps them use their large, club-like middle ear bones
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to sense low frequency activity in mounds more than 20 meters away.
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So, odds are: if a tree falls in a forest, someone’s bound to hear it.
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