Yes, most insects can hear. Insects use sounds to communicate with other insects, and to navigate their environment. Some even listen to the sounds of predators in order to avoid being eaten. Sound is produced by vibration, and insects hear by collecting and interpreting the vibrations in their environment. There are four types of insect auditory organs.
Most hearing insects have a pair of tympanal organs. Think of a tympani, the large drum used in the percussion section of an orchestra. Like the tympani, the tympanal organ consists of a membrane stretched on a frame, over an air-filled cavity. When the percussionist hammers on the membrane of the tympani, it vibrates and produces a sound. The insect's tympanal organ vibrates as it catches sound waves in the air. The insect also has a special receptor called the chordotonal organ, which senses this vibration of the tympanal organ, and translates the sound into a nerve impulse. Insects that use tympanal organs to hear include grasshoppers and crickets, cicadas, and some butterflies and moths.
For many insects, a receptor on the antennae called the Johnston's organ collects auditory information. Sensory cells on the pedicel, which is the second segment from the base of the antennae, detect vibration of the segment(s) above. Mosquitoes and fruit flies hear using the Johnston's organ.
The larvae of Lepidoptera and Orthoptera use small hairs, called setae, to gather the vibrations of sound. Caterpillars often respond to such sounds by exhibiting defensive behaviors. Some will stop moving completely, while others may contract their muscles and rear up in a fighting posture.
A structure in the mouths of certain hawkmoths enables them to hear ultrasonic sounds, such as those produced by echolocating bats. The labral pilifer, a tiny hair-like organ, is believed to sense vibrations at specific frequencies. Scientists note a distinctive movement of the insect's tongue when they subject the captive hawkmoths to those sounds. In flight, the hawkmoths can avoid a pursuing bat by listening for these frequencies.
(from insects.about.com)
Many insects can hear sounds but they do not hear in the same way as you or I. Cicadas have their hearing organs in their stomachs. Crickets have their hearing organs in their knees. Male mosquitoes hear with thousands of tiny hairs growing on their antennae.
Most insect do have ears. These "ears" are not ears as we know ears, but are the ear "drums" that sit on the surface of the body. There is no hole or ear flap as you are familiar with.
In many insects, the ability to hear is quit acute, because they need it to find a mate, like in Crickets, Cicadas, Katydids, Grasshoppers, etc. Next time you are spending a pleasant summer evening on your porch listening to the crickets chirping, remember they are not doing it for you, they are making this sound to attract a mate.
Yes, some moths make a buzzing sound. Many people think that all moths are silent, but there are some types that make humming, vibrating, or buzzing sounds like the "lawn moth," or sod webworm.
they have ears on their abdomens which are called tympanas. but these ears only recognize the sounds of other cicadas
Yes, otherways what would be the point of them making a noise, singing and calling to each other?
Not all moths are silent, so some moths do make noise like the Dogbane Tiger Moth.
through hairs on their body
Yes. They have eyes.
Butterflies are Deaf.
i think it make the sound of buzz
Bees make a buzzing sound, because they flap there wings 11,400 times per minute, which makes the sound.
Bees make a buzzing sound, that is caused by the rapid beating of their wings.
No, a buzzing is a concrete noun, a word something that can be heard, a physical sound.
A honey bee's wings beat 11400 times per minute (180 beats a second) causing their buzz sound. I think the answer should be: Quote: "The buzzing sound is heard when the bee makes the air vibrate in some way. It used to be thought that the movement of the wings caused the sound. However the bees can buzz even when the wings are at rest. So it is probably the vibration of the muscles in the thorax causing the thorax to vibrate that makes the buzzing sound." From the website: http://www.bumblebee.org/faq.htm The wings of the bee make up less then one percent of the buzzing sound. The noise almost entirely comes from the bee breathing through its fourteen spiracles across its abdomen. This applies to all other buzzing insects, blue bottles, hornets ect.
i think it make the sound of buzz
Bees make a buzzing sound, because they flap there wings 11,400 times per minute, which makes the sound.
that would be the wings, like all flying insects that make a buzzing sound.
buzzing
cranch
When you blow into a trumbone you have to use your lips to make the sound.
Bees make a buzzing sound, that is caused by the rapid beating of their wings.
Because their wings move so fast that it creates a buzzing noise
it doesn't make a sound if it did it would be like a buzzing sound.
They seem to make a buzzing sound, which is why aeroplanes are said to sometimes "buzz the airfield".
A buzzing sound can be made by rubbing your two fingers together. You must do this while your fingers are close to someone else's ear.
The rapid beating of the bee's wings makes a buzzing sound.