Unravelling the map and compass in bird navigation

Lead Research Organisation: Bangor University
Department Name: Sch of Natural Sciences

Abstract

The ability to orient and navigate in space is a vital adaptation for all animals and many strategies have evolved to allow animals to return to a known goal. Studying spatial navigation has revealed much about the structure and function of the brain, how it is impacted by age, damage and disease. It has also revealed much about how sensory systems are integrated to provide information for locating position within the environment. Among the most remarkable navigators are small migratory songbirds. These animals travel thousands of kilometres between breeding areas and winter sites, and show remarkable precision, being able to return to the same breeding site, sometimes even nest, year after year. These small birds also show remarkable flexibility, being able to correct for large displacements from their normal migratory path, to places they could not have been to before, and return to their normal breeding or winter area. This appears to be learned during their first migratory journey from the breeding area they were born in, to the winter ground that they reach after their first migration. Scientists hypothesise that they navigate in this way using something akin to a map and a compass. The map step of this process is crucial, as it allows them to determine their location in relation to their desired goal and is thought to function essentially like our Cartesian coordinate system, providing latitude and longitudinal information. This is an ability that seems to be beyond humans without resorting to technology, and yet birds can do this based on cues sensed in the environment. Whilst much research effort has been expended in trying to discover how they achieve this, it remains essentially unsolved, as we do not fully understand what environmental cues are used to determine their position. Received wisdom has it that the cues and senses used in the map are separate from those used in the compass. Thus celestial cues such as the sun and stars provide compass directions, but not location. The exception to this is the Earth's magnetic field. However, It has been argued that birds require and possess two separate magnetic sensory systems, one for the compass step, located in the eye, and a second for the map step, located in the beak. However, recent evidence has called into question whether the beak based sense exists. In addition to this, new evidence indicates that one cues that is used in locating the birds' position is declination, which varies from east to west in some parts of the world, i.e. It provides a cue to longitude?. This is calculated by comparing magnetic north detected by the magnetic compass with geographic (true) north detected by a celestial compass (the sun or stars). This means that contrary to previous expectations, the sensory systems used in the map are not separate from the compass, but may be integrated into it. This discovery leaves many open questions however. How exactly to birds calculate declination? As the majority of birds are night migrants it makes sense that the star compass is the primary candidate, but some studies suggest that these birds calibrate the magnetic compass with sunset, not the stars. Do birds need two magnetic senses? If birds can calculate their longitudinal position with the magnetic sense in the eye, do they also calculate their latitudinal position with this sensory system? Do celestial cues, long relegated to the role of compass, actually play a greater role in the map, as they also could provide information on latitude. How do birds learn these cues? Birds must learn these cues on their first migratory journey, but the precise way in which they build this map is still entirely unknown. This research project will investigate these questions using a small songbird, the Eurasian reed warbler, to provide new insights into how it is able to navigate between its breeding grounds in Europe and winter grounds in Sub Saharan Africa.

Technical Summary

The way in which migratory birds are able to navigate between breeding and wintering grounds thousands of miles apart with such remarkable precision remains a mystery despite 50 years of research under the dominant paradigm of the "map and compass" theory. In light of the lack of progress under this theory, this research proposal aims to develop a new paradigm for addressing the mystery. This is built around the new discovery that birds use declination, i.e. the difference between the magnetic and celestial compasses, to calculate their position. This requires that birds use the radical pair magnetic compass sense, located in their visual system, to calculate their position. This suggests that the map and compass may not be separate entities, and the cues that birds use for navigation may have been hiding in plain sight. In light of this the sun, the stars and magnetic inclination, previously thought to be only used to calculate direction, must be reassessed as this discovery presents the possibility that they are integrated into the map component of birds navigational map This proposal will address this to discover the extent to which information thought to be directional actually provides information on location, how this is learned and the spatial scale of this mechanism. This will be acheived by a combination of cue conflict experiments, virtual displacements using Helmholz coils, and disruption of the magnetic sense using broadband RF fields, a diagnostic test of the radical pair magnetic sense.

Planned Impact

Who will benefit from the research?

The research in this proposal is driven by basic knowledge acquisition and focuses on fundamental aspects of animal behaviour relating to sensory systems and neurobiology. As such the most direct beneficiaries are academics, within and outside the field of interest. However, Migration is a subject that fascinates the public and a number of TV and radio documentaries attest to this. Understanding the mechanisms of migration will provide information that can be disseminated to improve public understanding of science.
Conservation organisations may also benefit from the research on the extent of impact of broadband electromagnetic noise on birds behaviour.

How will they benefit from the research.

In light of the discovery that broadband electromagnetic noise disrupts the mangetic compass sense, the findings of this research have the potential to influence policy in terms of how such noise should be controlled so as to avoid impacting the behavior of migratory birds, which are identified as in decline. An awareness of the impact on aspects of animal behaviour which ultimately may change migration patterns is vital in educating the general populace of the impact of human induced environmental change and noise pollution. The postdoctoral researcher will receive training in capture and handling of migratory birds, which is a recognized survey technique, and thus provides a skill that is transferable from academia to conservation organizations. They will learn to understand multiple disciplines in order to measure, manipulate and disrupt the magnetic field. They will also learn skills for management of budgets and of data and project design, which is transferable across a wide range of employment sectors.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Our study set out to investigate the cues and mechanisms used by migrating birds for navigation. Traditionally, birds are thought to use two seperate components to navigate: a map to locate position and a compass to head in the direction established to reach their goal. However, a previous discovery by our group showed that declination (the difference between magnetic and geographic compass direction) could be used as part of the map. This questioned the traditional separation of map and compass as declination is calculated based on compass cues. In this grant we went on to establish that further to this, birds can use a combination of declination and inclination (the angle of "dip" of the magnetic field relative to the earths surface). Inclination is a key cue used by birds as a compass and this shows that birds can detect their position based entirely on cues more traditionally associated with direction, this suggesting that the map and compass is not as seperate as previously thought
Exploitation Route The demonstration that magnetic and celestial compass cues are required to locate position has implications for the impact of anthropogenic pollution on birds. Electromagnetic noise has been shown to disrupt the magnetic compass, and light may disrupt the celestial compass system (although it is not yet known what impacts this has). Thus there are significant implications for the conservation of migratory birds.
Sectors Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Education,Electronics,Energy,Environment

 
Description The publication of Kishkinev et al. 2021 received significant interest in the print and digital media, educating the public about the way in which birds navigate. A 10 minute video by Chris Packham and Meghan McCubbin posted on BBC Earth discussing the findings received 28000 views to date on a page with 11 million followers. 3 articles in The Conversation on the findings of the grant have received more tha 88000 reads.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Education,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Description Departmental Seminar (Exeter) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Departmental Seminar to the Centre for Research in Animal Behaviour
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Departmental Seminar (Swansea) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Departmental Seminar to Swansea Biosciences
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description EOU conference (Cluj-Napoca, Rumania) 26-30 August 2019 Talk: Evidence for 'magnetic' true navigation in a migratory songbird 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Presentation to a conference audience at the European Ornithologists Union which contains a mixed audience of Academics, general public, postgrad students and Non Governmental organisations
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description International workshop: Environmental effects of electric, magnetic, and electromagnetic fields: Flora and Fauna 5th - 7th November 2019, Munich 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Invited talk by PI Richard Holland on the effect of Electromagnetic noise in bats. Workshop organised by the German Federal Office for Radiation Protection (BfS) to gather information on the impact of electromagnetic radiation on flora and fauna. Several governmental representatives asked questions about how to mitigate for potential effects.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.emf-environment-workshop.de/
 
Description NP-Forschungstag (National Park Science Day of the National Park Lake Neusiedl Seewinkel) 6 September 2019 Talk: Evidence for 'magnetic' true navigation in a migratory songbird 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Presentation to National Park workers in the Neusidl National park, and to the general public.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description Presentation to the Joint Nature Conservation Comittee 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Presentation to JNCC board meeting engagement event on the conservation implications of the cues used by birds to navigate
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description Seminar to OxNav group, University of Oxford 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact A seminar and engagement activity with postgraduate students at the University of Oxford
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020