Literature

AuthorsYearsort descendingTitle
F. WHITE1877[Letters to Editor]
Rothschild, Haskell1966Stridulation of the Garden Tiger Moth, Arctia caja L., audible to the human ear
Møhl, Miller1976Ultrasonic clicks produced by the peacock butterfly: a possible bat-repellent mechanism
Bailey1978Resonant wing systems in the Australian whistling moth Hecatesia (Agarasidae, Lepidoptera)
Surlykke, Michelsen1988Temporal coding in the auditory receptor of the moth ear
Hoy, Nolen, Brodfuehrer1989The neuroethology of acoustic startle and escape in flying insects
Heller, Achmann1993The ultrasonic song of the moth Amyna natalis (Lepidoptera:Noctudidae: Acontiinae)
Waters, Jones1994Wingbeat-generated ultrasound in noctuid moths increases the discharge rate of the bat-detecting A1 cell
Heller, Krahe1994Sound production and hearing in the pyralid moth Symmoracma minoralis
Waters2003Bats and moths: what is there left to learn?
Windmill, Jackson, Tuck, Robert2006Keeping up with Bats: Dynamic Auditory Tuning in a Moth
Lucas, Windmill, Robert, Yack2009Auditory mechanics and sensitivity in the tropical butterfly Morpho peleides (Papilionoidea, Nymphalidae)
Lafaille, Bimbard, Greenfield2010Risk trading in mating behavior: forgoing anti-predatorresponses reduces the likelihood of missing terminalmating opportunities
Bura, Rohwer, Martin, Yack2011Whistling in caterpillars (Amorpha juglandis, Bombycoidea): sound-producing mechanism and function
Hofstede, Goerlitz, Montealegre-Zapata, Robert2011Tympanal mechanics and neural responses in the ears of a noctuid moth
Mora, Cobo-Cuan, Macias-Escriva, Perez, Nowotny, Kossl2013Mechanical tuning of the moth ear: distortion-product otoacoustic emissions and tympanal vibrations
Barber, Kawahara2013Hawkmoths produce anti-bat ultrasound
Hofstede, Goerlitz, Ratcliffe, Holderied, Surlykke2013The simple ears of noctuoid moths are tuned to the calls of their sympatric bat community
Brehm, Fischer, Gorb, Kleinteich, Kühn, Neubert, Pohl, Wipfler, Wurdinger2015The unique sound production of the Death’s-head hawkmoth (Acherontia atropos (Linnaeus, 1758)) revisited
Nakano, Mason2017Hearing sensitivity is more relevant to acoustic conspicuousness than to mechanical constraints in crambid moths
Dookie, Young, Lamothe, Schoenle, Yack2017Why do caterpillars whistle at birds? Insect defence sounds startle avian predators
Agassiz2017Do small ermine moths sing? Possible stridulatory sound production in Yponomeutidae (Lepidoptera)
Sugiura, Takanashi2018Hornworm counterattacks: defensive strikes and sound production in response to invertebrate attackers
Rosi-Denadai, Scallion, Merrett, Yack2018Vocalization in caterpillars: a novel sound-producing mechanism for insects
Mikhail, Lewis, Yack2018What does a butterfly hear? Physiological characterization of auditory afferents in Morpho peleides (Nymphalidae)
Shen, Neil, Robert, Drinkwater2018The micromechanics and bioacoustic behaviour of Bunaea alcinoe</I> moth scales
Neil, Shen, Drinkwater, Robert2018Stealthy moths avoid bats with acoustic camouflage
Dowdy, Conner2019Characteristics of tiger moth (Erebidae: Arctiinae) anti-bat sounds can be predicted from tymbal morphology
O’Reilly, Agassiz, Neil2019Deaf moths employ acoustic Müllerian mimicry against bats using wingbeat-powered tymbals
Sugiura, Takanashi, Kojima, Kajiura2020Squeaking caterpillars: independent evolution of sonic defense in wild silkmoths
Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith