1 / 29

Migration and Navigation

Migration and Navigation. Migration examples Navigational strategies Piloting Path integration Compass orientation Navigational mechanisms Compass cues. Why migrate?. Increase availability of food Avoid cold weather Decrease risk of predation on juveniles. Monarch butterflies.

yitro
Download Presentation

Migration and Navigation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Migration and Navigation • Migration examples • Navigational strategies • Piloting • Path integration • Compass orientation • Navigational mechanisms • Compass cues

  2. Why migrate? • Increase availability of food • Avoid cold weather • Decrease risk of predation on juveniles

  3. Monarch butterflies 300 million Michoacan, Mexico

  4. Spiny lobster Move from shallow to deep water in the fall in long single file lines. Females spawn in deep water in spring before returning.

  5. Salmon

  6. Green turtles Nest on Ascension Is., feed off Brazil and return to same beach

  7. White-bearded Wildebeest 1.5 million animals per year Low levels of phosphorus in short grass may stimulate movement

  8. Gray whales

  9. Lesser long-nosed bats Feed on cactus going north, agave going south

  10. Radar tracking of fall migrants N. American birds 254 species migrate to the tropics

  11. Arctic terns Fly 40,000 km each year

  12. Navigational strategies • Piloting • Use landmark to locate goal (nest, etc.) • Path integration (dead reckoning) • compute net vector by integrating distance traveled with compass direction • Accumulates errors, only good for short distances • Compass orientation • follow compass heading to goal or landmark • True navigation • Use compass and map (cognitive) to plot route

  13. Landmark orientation • One landmark provides distance, but not direction • Animal must remember location of goal relative to two or more landmarks • Evidence from bees and pigeons suggests that the animal has a mental template of landmark positions • Animals approach landmarks from a single compass direction. Consequently, the animal doesn’t have to memorize the templatefrom all directions.

  14. Navigation by dead reckoning • Use the direction and distance of each successive leg during the outbound trip • Compute net vector and use compass to return home Home

  15. Cataglyphis ant homing When ants are picked up and moved, they travel in a parallel direction Ants use path integration Wehner

  16. 3-D path integration by ants Ant odometers record horizontal distance moved not actual distance traveled Thus, they do not use time or energy expended to determine distance Trained uphill/downhill with food source 8.7 m Trained on flat track with food source 5.2 m Wohlgemuth, S. 2001 Nature 411:795.

  17. Starlings use a compass

  18. Brown: Germany White: Hungary Blue: F1 Migratory direction is heritable in blackcap warblers

  19. Compass cues • Sun • Time-compensated solar compass • Clock-shift experiments • Polarized light • Stars • Nocturnal paths • Planetarium experiments • Geomagnetic field • Pigeon homing experiments • Lateralization in robins • Turtle swimming

  20. A solar compass requires time compensation

  21. Logic of clock-shift experiments

  22. Pigeon homing after a 6 h clock-shift Each dot represents the bearing chosen by a bird. Black dots are control birds, color dots are experimentals. Dashed line is homeward. When the sun is out, clock-shifted birds go SE rather than SW. On a cloudy day, clock-shifted birds do not change direction indicating that they are not using solar cues.

  23. Polarized light indicates solar position on a partially cloudy day

  24. Nocturnal flight paths implicate celestial compass Veery

  25. Indigo buntings in planetariums Control sky is no stars Planetarium expts show that birds rely on rotational point to indicate north

  26. Pigeon homing with Helmholz coils

  27. Magnetic compass is right eye/left brain dominant in robins WILTSCHKO, W et al. 2002 Nature 419, 467 - 470 Orientation behaviour under monochromatic green light with the magnetic field as the only cue. The mean headings of the 12 birds are indicated as triangles at the periphery of the circle; the grand mean vector is represented by an arrow proportional to the radius of the circle (for numerical values, see Table 1). The inner circles are the 5% (dotted) and the 1% (solid) significance border of the Rayleigh test25. a, Binocular control (Bi) tested in the geomagnetic field. b, Monocular left eye (L) tested in the geomagnetic field. c, d, Monocular right eye tested in the geomagnetic field (c; R) and in a magnetic field with the vertical component inverted, so that the inclination was pointing upwards (d; R(UI)).

  28. Turtles detect magnetism

  29. Magnetic field cues • Polarity: • lobsters, newts, salmon, mole-rats • Inclination: • birds, sea turtles • in northern hemisphere N is indicated by the direction in which the force lines dip toward the earth • Intensity: bees, alligators

More Related