| Literature DB >> 29085642 |
Eviatar Natan1, Yoni Vortman2.
Abstract
The ability to sense Earth's magnetic field has evolved in various taxa. However, despite great efforts to find the 'magnetic-sensor' in vertebrates, the results of these scientific efforts remain inconclusive. A few decades ago, it was found that bacteria, known as magnetotactic bacteria (MTB), can move along a magnetic field using nanometric chain-like structures. Still, it is not fully clear why these bacteria evolved to have this capacity. Thus, while for MTB the 'magnetic-sensor' is known but the adaptive value is still under debate, for metazoa it is the other way around. In the absence of convincing evidence for any 'magnetic-sensor' in metazoan species sensitive to Earth's magnetic field, we hypothesize that a mutualism between these species and MTB provides one. In this relationship the host benefits from a magnetotactic capacity, while the bacteria benefit a hosting environment and dispersal. We provide support for this hypothesis using existing literature, demonstrating that by placing the MTB as the 'magnetic-sensor', previously contradictory results are now in agreement. We also propose plausible mechanisms and ways to test the hypothesis. If proven correct, this hypothesis would shed light on the forces driving both animal and bacteria magnetotactic abilities.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteria-host relationship; Lacrimal glands; Magnetoreception based navigation; Magnetotactic bacteria (MTB); Movement ecology
Year: 2017 PMID: 29085642 PMCID: PMC5651570 DOI: 10.1186/s40462-017-0113-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mov Ecol ISSN: 2051-3933 Impact factor: 3.600
Support and criticism for the “radical-pair” and “magnetite-based” magnetoreception hypotheses
| Support | Criticism | |
|---|---|---|
| Radical–Pair | Experiments showing that birds can only sense the magnetic field under illumination with relative short wavelength, as opposed to longer wavelengths [ | The effect of the magnetic field on the spin-state of the molecule has not been demonstrated, either in vitro or in vivo, under the Earth’s weak magnetic field, but only under a field orders of magnitude stronger [ |
| The activation mechanism is missing, meaning how the signal transduces to initiate a neural response. | ||
| Magnetite-Based | Magnetite crystals have been detected in magnetic sensing fish, reptiles and birds [ | The magnetites found in some magnetic-sensing animals are not associated to the animals’ neuronal, or other tissue, but rather located in macrophages [ |
| Magnetotactic-bacteria (MTB) can act upon the field via similar magnetite crystals [ | No one has seen magnetite crystals serving as a ‘ |
Fig. 1Visual abstract of the symbiotic magnetotactic hypothesis