| Literature DB >> 21691766 |
Ingo Schiffner1, Patrick Fuhrmann, Roswitha Wiltschko.
Abstract
Pigeons were released at two sites of equal distance from the loft, one within a magnetic anomaly, the other in magnetically quiet terrain, and their tracks were recorded with the help of GPS receivers. A comparison of the beginning of the tracks revealed striking differences: within the anomaly, the initial phase lasted longer, and the distance flown was longer, with the pigeons' headings considerably farther from the home direction. During the following departure phase, the birds were well homeward oriented at the magnetically quiet site, whereas they continued to be disoriented within the anomaly. Comparing the tracks in the anomaly with the underlying magnetic contours shows considerable differences between individuals, without a common pattern emerging. The differences in magnetic intensity along the pigeons' path do not differ from a random distribution of intensity differences around the release site, indicating that the magnetic contours do not directly affect the pigeons' routes. Within the anomaly, pigeons take longer until their flights are oriented, but 5 km from the release point, the birds, still within the anomaly, are also significantly oriented in the home direction. These findings support the assumption that magnetically anomalous conditions initially interfere with the pigeons' navigational processes, with birds showing rather individual responses in their attempts to overcome these problems.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21691766 PMCID: PMC3128737 DOI: 10.1007/s00114-011-0802-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Naturwissenschaften ISSN: 0028-1042
Fig. 1Magnetic conditions and tracks within an area of 5 × 5 km around the release sites: Oberlais within the anomaly (a) and Essenheim within magnetically “quiet” terrain (b). The colors in the map indicate the differences in intensity (given in 100 × 100 m squares) to those at the release point—note that the scale is non-linear. The release sites in the center of a circle with the radius 2.5 km is marked by a red dot; the arrow indicates the home direction. The tracks are shown as white lines, with the black dots marking the points of decision
Comparing variables from the beginning of the tracks between the two sites (mean vectors and medians given)
| Variable (medians given) | Control site | Anomaly site | Testing for difference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 13 | 12 | ||
| First Points of Decision, center | +35°, 498 m* | +100°, 597 m* |
| n.s. |
| Initial phase before the first Point of Decision: | ||||
| Duration of initial phase | 105 s | 225 s |
|
|
| Distance flown | 1,405 m | 3,694 m |
|
|
| Mean vector of headings | +45°, 0.65** | −176°, 0.48n.s |
|
|
| Absolute deviation from home | 55° | 143° |
|
|
| Steadiness of flight | 0.29 | 0.18 |
|
|
| Departure phase after the first Point of Decision: | ||||
| Mean vector of headings | +19°, 0.74*** | −43°, 0.23n.s. |
|
|
| Absolute deviation from home | 45° | 77° |
|
|
| Steadiness of flight | 0.75 | 0.75 |
| n.s. |
| 2.5 km from the release point | +7°, 0.86*** | −32°, 0.39n.s. |
| n.s. |
| 5.0 km from the release point | +12°, 0.93*** | −21°, 0.85*** |
| n.s. |
Directions are given as deviations from the respective home direction, with + indicating a clockwise and − a counter-clockwise deviation
F test statistic of the Hotelling two-sample test, U test statistic of the Mann–Whitney test, U test statistic of the Mardia Watson Wheeler test for circular distributions (Baschelet 1981). Asterisks at the center of the first Point of Decision and at mean vectors indicate significant differences from random (Hotelling's one-sample test and Rayleigh test, respectively). Significance levels: *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001; n.s. not significant
Fig. 2Distribution of differences encountered by the pigeons along their routes through the anomaly until they passed the 5-km line (hatched bars) compared to those of a random distribution generated on the basis of 12 trajectories, one every 30°, from the release point to the 5-km line (open bars)