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Published January 14, 2015
WASHINGTON — When birds migrate over long distances — sometimes thousands of miles — they usually end up in exactly the same place year after year. Now German scientists think it's all thanks to magentism.
Birds navigate in part by orienting themselves with the sun and by following physical landmarks. But these strategies alone are not enough. Birds must be able to navigate on cloudy days and find their way across huge swaths of ocean where there are no recognizable landmarks. Scientists have suspected for years that birds have an innate ability to sense the Earth's magnetic field and adjust their paths accordingly, but they still do not understand how.
Some scientists have hypothesized that the mechanism is rooted in a bird's beak, where iron-based minerals act as magnetic sensors that detect the bird's orientation, feeding this information to its brain via a special nerve. Other scientists have disputed this, proposing instead that the magnetic sensors are actually in a bird's eyes, where light receptors sensitive to magnetic fields feed data to the brain through optic nerves.
Henrik Mouritsen and his colleagues at the University of Oldenburg in Germany have now made a compelling argument for the eyes. They reported in the journal Nature that European robins with lesions that disrupt a specialized light-processing part of the brain are unable to orient themselves using the Earth's magnetic field. Birds with lesions disrupting the nerve that connects the beak to the brain do not have the same problem.
This strongly suggests that birds can "see" the Earth's magnetic field and orient themselves accordingly.
This article was provided by Inside Science News Service, which is supported by the American Institute of Physics, a not-for-profit publisher of scientific journals.
https://www.foxnews.com/story/animal-magnetism-may-explain-bird-migration