1 / 35

Biology 272a: Comparative Animal Physiology

Biology 272a: Comparative Animal Physiology. Animal Navigation. Why do animals navigate?. Reproduction Food and other resources Avoiding inclement conditions Finding ‘home’ An ultimate question. How do animals navigate?. A proximate question. Navigational Strategies.

Download Presentation

Biology 272a: Comparative Animal Physiology

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. Biology 272a: Comparative Animal Physiology Animal Navigation

  2. Why do animals navigate? • Reproduction • Food and other resources • Avoiding inclement conditions • Finding ‘home’ • An ultimate question

  3. How do animals navigate? • A proximate question

  4. Navigational Strategies • Trail following/route learning • Piloting • Path integration • Compass navigation • Map-and compass navigation

  5. Trail following/route learning • Trails may be visual (e.g. deer trails) • Olfactory (e.g. pheromone trails in ants)

  6. Piloting • Using landmark cues to find a known location

  7. Niko Tinbergen (1907-1988) • Nobel prize for Physiology or Medicine (1973) • PhD Thesis (32 pages long!) on navigation in digger wasps (‘Beewolves’)

  8. Philanthus - Beewolves Hymenoptera: Crabronidae

  9. Piloting • Homing pigeons (once in home area) • Clark’s Nutcrackers (food caching)

  10. Path integration • “Dead Reckoning” • Know direction & Distance and calculate position from there • Long way out, short way home

  11. Path integration in desert ants (Cataglyphis fortis)

  12. How do ants know how far they’ve gone?

  13. How do they know which direction they’ve gone? • ‘Compass’ based on visual cues • Celestial • Sun position • Polarised light

  14. Star compasses

  15. Star compasses • Nocturnal migrating/flying birds • Seabirds • (some) migrating song birds • Experiments • Raise birds so they can see night sky, but not landmarks • Raise birds in planetariums with weird star configurations

  16. Sun Compasses • Need to know time of day • If manipulate this, animal moves in wrong direction

  17. Sun Compasses Fig 17.5

  18. Polarised light The direction from which this polarised light comes indicates the direction of the sun Fig. 17.6a

  19. Fig. 17.6b Polarised light Polarised light means you can tell where the sun is even on a cloudy day!

  20. How do insects see polarised light? Ommatidium Dorsal rim of Compound eye has particular ‘focus’ on polarised light Aligned Rhodopsin molecules

  21. Magnetic fields… they’re out there! Fig 17.8

  22. Magnetic bacteria use ‘magnetosomes’ to orient to magnetic fields Magnetic fields: organisms can detect them!

  23. Animals can detect magnetic fields…

  24. Migrating fin whales avoid areas of strong magnetic fields

  25. How do we show that animals can actually detect magnetic fields, and how do they do it?

  26. How do animals detect magnetism? I Trout • Magnetite crystals associated with specialised cells in nose of trout • If blocked, magnetic sense disappears

  27. How do animals detect magnetism? II - Birds • Evidence that the nose is required for magnetoreception in pigeons • cf. magnetite in trout nose • Previous studies that blocked nose may have been blocking magnetoreception, not smell… • Most evidence suggests that magnetoreception = ‘map’ rather than ‘compass’ in birds

  28. How do animals detect magnetism? III Birds (again) • Resonant molecules? • Some evidence from birds that light-affected molecules (e.g. rhodopsin) might return to unexcited state at different rates under different magnetic conditions • Some magnetoreception is light-dependent

  29. How do animals detect magnetism? IIIa: Flies • A blue-light receptor is necessary for magnetoreception • Gene identified, knockout flies don’t respond to magnetic fields

  30. How do animals detect magnetism? IV: Sharks • Are known to swim in straight lines across long distances of open ocean • Can detect electricity • Ampullae of Lorenzini • Is electromagnetic induction as they swim generating currents they can detect?

  31. Magnetic sense can provide animals with both a map and a compass • Magnetic anomalies

  32. Map and compass • Many animals have a visual (or olfactory) map of their surroundings, which they combine with a compass to allow them to navigate.

  33. Fig 17.10

  34. Navigational Strategies • Trail following/route learning • Piloting • Path integration • Compass navigation • Map-and compass navigation

  35. Reading for Tuesday • Biological clocks • Pp 383-389

More Related