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UM-Bot
user posted image rBirds can travel the world without any of the gizmos that humans depend on, and a new study suggests how: Our feathered friends might "see" Earth's magnetic field. While other mechanisms are thought to help birds navigate, including magnetically sensitive cells within their beaks, their brain regions responsible for vision are in full gear during magnetic navigation, researchers said. "If you look into the brain of a bird during magnetic compass orientation, only the visual system is highly active," said study co-author Henrik Mouritsen, a biologist at the University of Oldenburg in Germany, noting that most migratory birds do so at night. "Other regions of the brain are not, so birds could use vision to 'see' Earth's magnetism and orient themselves." Mouritsen and his colleagues' findings are detailed online in a recent issue of the journal PLoS ONE. The researchers previously discovered molecules called cryptochromes, which change their chemistry in the presence of a magnetic field, in the retinas of migratory birds' eyes. The researchers previously discovered molecules called cryptochromes, which change their chemistry in the presence of a magnetic field, in the retinas of migratory birds' eyes. "When light hits these molecules, their chemistry changes and magnetism can influence them," Mouritsen said. The molecules might then affect light-sensing cells in the retina to create images, which would help the brain navigate during flight, he added. A direct connection between the specialized cells and the region of the bird's brain active during magnetic orientation, however, had never been shown before.

Mouritsen and his team recently found such connections between the cryptochrome-holding retinal cells and the "cluster N" region of migratory birds' brains, located in part of the brain responsible for vision. "Cluster N is highly active during magnetic field orientation at night, when migratory birds fly," he said, explaining that non-migratory birds don't seem to use it during night flight. "We can't see what birds see, obviously, but they may pick up some sort of shading in their vision at night to act as a compass."

linked-image View: Full Article | Source: Live Science
MasterPo
I thought this was a given? That some birds (like pigeons) had small amounts of magnetite in their skulls that helped them navigate by maganetic fields. I read about it in grade school.
Uversa
QUOTE(MasterPo @ Sep 30 2007, 04:24 PM) *
I thought this was a given? That some birds (like pigeons) had small amounts of magnetite in their skulls that helped them navigate by maganetic fields. I read about it in grade school.


Its never been a "given" that they actually see it with their eyes. This is the whole point of the article.
Alex01
QUOTE(MasterPo @ Sep 30 2007, 05:24 PM) *
I thought this was a given? That some birds (like pigeons) had small amounts of magnetite in their skulls that helped them navigate by maganetic fields. I read about it in grade school.


Yes exactly, this is old news, pigeons were used in WW2 as messangers, in the battle between Brittian and Germany, they flyed all they way to Germany and vice versa using this method of guidance.
MasterPo
Visually seeing the mag fields - gotcha. That part didn't sink in.

That would be very cool!!
SolarPlexus
QUOTE(MasterPo @ Sep 30 2007, 05:24 PM) *
That some birds (like pigeons) had small amounts of magnetite in their skulls that helped them navigate by maganetic fields. I read about it in grade school.


yup, i saw a documentary about that on National Geographic. Its fascinating what nature has in store.
Ppl now developed a new kind of tech in medicine where they use small pieces of magnetite connected to a miniature camera and so they guide the magnetite (and the cam with it) with the help of a big magnet thats above the patient trough extremely small canals in the body unaccessible by now. Just as the earth's magnetic field guides the birds, this big magnet guides the cam trough the person's body.
MasterPo
I also saw something on National Geographic that dolphins and whales may have similar abilities.
SolarPlexus
i know that whales use their own form of sonar called echolocation to navigate and find food.
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