Overview
- Peer‑reviewed analysis in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences examined vibroacoustic signals from two ant species and nine butterfly species collected in northern Italy.
- Researchers quantified pulse tempo, interval timing and regularity, finding that rhythmic complexity tightly tracked each species’ reliance on ants (myrmecophily).
- Only ants and the most ant‑dependent caterpillars produced both a steady isochronous beat and a double‑meter pattern of alternating long and short intervals.
- Authors interpret rhythmic matching as a channel that helps larvae gain protection, food and entry to nests, with causal playback tests planned but not yet completed.
- Open questions include how larvae generate the vibrations; reported examples with pronounced rhythms include Plebejus argus and Phengaris (Maculinea) alcon, and findings suggest rhythm is widespread beyond large‑brained animals.