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First published online October 19, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 3697-3705 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.001313
Commentary |
Magnetic maps in animals: nature's GPS
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: klohmann{at}email.unc.edu)
Accepted 11 July 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: magnetic, map, orientation, navigation, magnetoreception, secular variation, sea turtle
| Introduction |
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The Earth's field provides animals with two potential types of information.
The simplest of these is directional or compass information, which enables an
animal to maintain a consistent heading in a particular direction such as
north or south. Magnetic compasses are phylogenetically widespread and exist
in several invertebrate groups, as well as in all major groups of vertebrate
animals (Wiltschko and Wiltschko,
1995
; Wiltschko and Wiltschko,
2005
; Johnsen and Lohmann,
2005
).
Alone, a compass is often insufficient to guide an animal to a specific destination or to steer it reliably along a long and complex migratory route. For example, a sea turtle migrating through the ocean toward a distant target can be swept off course by currents, and a migratory bird's heading can be altered by wind. Navigation can therefore be enhanced by an ability to determine geographic position. For human navigators, this need is now usually met by a global positioning system (GPS), which can provide geographic position and, when necessary, compute the direction to a specific goal. For some migratory animals, positional information inherent in the Earth's magnetic field provides a similar, although considerably less precise, way of assessing geographic location. Animals that can derive positional information from the Earth's field (as opposed to directional information) are often said to have a `magnetic map'.
It is important to recognize that the term `map', although ingrained in the
animal navigation literature, is imprecise and perhaps unfortunate, inasmuch
as it connotes specific spatial representations used by humans
(Walcott, 1996
). In reality,
little is known about whether internal spatial representations exist in
animals and, if they do, how closely they conform to human concepts of maps
(Bennett, 1996
). To further
complicate matters, no universally accepted definition exists for the term
`map' among animal navigation researchers, and different authors have applied
the term in different and sometimes contradictory ways (reviewed by
Lohmann and Lohmann,
2006
).
Increasingly, however, `map' has come to be used in a broad and almost
metaphorical sense (e.g. Walcott,
1996
; Gould, 1998
;
Mouritsen, 2001
;
Boles and Lohmann, 2003
). In
this usage, which we adopt here, the term `magnetic map' is a convenient
shorthand that encompasses all uses of positional information in the Earth's
field and makes no assumptions about the nature of the internal spatial
representation (if any) that a particular animal has. Thus, the information in
a magnetic map may be inherited or learned, specific or very general, and used
for diverse purposes depending on the needs of the animal. A magnetic map
might, for example, tell an animal that it has arrived at a point in a
migratory route where it should orient westward or that it is approximately
north or south of the area where it lives. In sum, an animal has a magnetic
map if it uses the Earth's magnetic field as a source of positional
information, whereas it has a magnetic compass if it uses the field as a
source of directional information. Some animals, of course, have both
(Wiltschko and Wiltschko,
2003
; Lohmann and Lohmann,
2006
).
| Positional information in the Earth's field |
|---|
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|
In addition to inclination angle, at least three other magnetic field
elements vary across the Earth's surface in ways that make them suitable for a
position-finding sense (Skiles,
1985
; Lohmann and Lohmann,
1999
). These include: (1) the intensity (strength) of the total
field; (2) the intensity of the horizontal field; (3) the intensity of the
vertical field. For animals that can perceive the direction of true geographic
north (for example, by using the star patterns to determine the axis of
Earth's rotation), additional magnetic parameters such as declination (the
difference between true north and magnetic north) are also potential cues.
An important caveat is that fine-scale or local patterns of magnetic field
contours are more complex than the general regional patterns because
concentrations of magnetic minerals in the Earth's crust often generate local
field anomalies (Skiles,
1985
). Although these variations are typically less than 1% of the
total field, their gradients (i.e. variation per distance) can be
significantly greater than the gradients due to the main dipole field, and
they can also be aligned in different directions. The larger gradients might
be easier for a short-distance migrant or homing animal to detect, but the
complexity of local magnetic contours indicates that any navigational
strategies that exploit magnetic topography over these smaller spatial scales
are likely to be site-specific, difficult to generalize, and learned rather
than inherited.
The strength of local anomalies diminishes rapidly with distance from them. Thus, for animals such as sea turtles and migratory birds that travel relatively quickly and which swim or fly considerable distances above geological formations, local anomalies are probably of little consequence in most situations. Such animals can presumably pass rapidly across small anomalous regions, encountering only slight, transient irregularities before re-entering a magnetic environment dominated by the much larger main (dipole) field. Animals that crawl slowly on the surface of the Earth and move only over short distances, however, live in a world in which the crucial magnetic gradients can be influenced greatly by local anomalies. Thus, the spatial scale over which an animal moves, its speed of travel, and its proximity to the Earth's surface are all important factors in evaluating the magnetic environment in which an animal must navigate.
| Magnetic maps and migratory pathways |
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Loggerhead sea turtles Caretta caretta undergo one of the longest
and most spectacular marine migrations. Hatchlings that emerge on beaches
along the east coast of Florida, USA, migrate offshore to the North Atlantic
gyre, the circular current system that encircles the Sargasso Sea. Young
loggerheads remain for several years in the gyre system, during which time
many cross to the eastern side of the Atlantic Ocean
(Bolten et al., 1998
;
Bolten, 2003
) before returning
to the vicinity of the southeastern United States to take up residence in
coastal feeding grounds (Sears et al.,
1995
; Musick and Limpus,
1997
).
Experiments with loggerhead hatchlings revealed that they can detect at
least two parameters of the Earth's magnetic field: magnetic inclination angle
(Lohmann and Lohmann, 1994
)
and magnetic field intensity (Lohmann and
Lohmann, 1996
). Furthermore, when hatchlings were subjected to
fields replicating those found in three widely separated locations along the
perimeter of the North Atlantic gyre
(Lohmann et al., 2001
), they
responded in ways that appear to have functional significance in the
migration. Turtles tested in a magnetic field replicating one that exists
offshore near northern Florida swam east-southeast
(Fig. 2) whereas those exposed
to a field replicating one found near the northeastern edge of the gyre swam
approximately south (Fig. 2).
Turtles exposed to a field like one found near the southernmost part of the
gyre swam west-northwest (Fig.
2). Thus, the results confirmed that loggerhead turtles can
distinguish among magnetic fields that exist in widely separated oceanic
regions and, moreover, the responses appear likely to keep the turtles within
the confines of the gyre and help them advance along the migratory route.
|
Captive flycatchers exposed to a sequence of magnetic fields approximately
matching those they normally encounter while migrating shifted orientation in
the same direction and at the same time as conspecifics during the natural
migration (Fig. 3). Such shifts
in orientation did not occur in birds maintained in the ambient field at the
migration start point, or in birds maintained in a field replicating that at
the migratory endpoint. Thus, the results suggest a complex interaction
between an endogenous time program and magnetic parameters, in which the birds
must apparently experience sequentially the fields of specific locations at
the appropriate times in order to orient appropriately at each point in the
migration (Beck and Wiltschko,
1988
).
|
In at least one species of bird, magnetic positional information is used in
a different way. The thrush nightingale Luscinia luscinia migrates
south across the Saharan desert, a vast region over which food is seldom
available. Birds held in Sweden but exposed to a sequence of regional fields
along the migratory route, the last from a location just north of the desert,
gained significantly more weight than control birds held under identical
conditions but in the local Swedish field
(Fransson et al., 2001
;
Kullberg et al., 2003
). Thus,
the results imply that either a regional field just north of the Sahara, or a
sequence of fields normally encountered during the migration, triggers changes
in behavior and physiology that result in the birds accumulating fat needed
for their trans-desert flight.
| Magnetic maps and target areas |
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After a period of years in the open ocean, for example, juvenile sea
turtles of several species leave the pelagic environment and take up residence
in feeding grounds in shallow, coastal regions
(Musick and Limpus, 1997
).
Such turtles often show fidelity to specific foraging areas, returning to them
reliably after long, seasonal migrations or experimental displacements
(Ireland, 1980
;
Avens et al., 2003
;
Avens and Lohmann, 2004
). How
the turtles return to these foraging areas was investigated using juvenile
green turtles Chelonia mydas captured in their feeding grounds near
the central east coast of Florida. The turtles were placed in an orientation
arena near the capture site and exposed to one of two magnetic fields: a field
that exists at a location 337 km to the north or one that occurs an equivalent
distance to the south. Turtles exposed to the northern field swam southward,
whereas those exposed to the southern field swam northward
(Fig. 4). Thus, the turtles
behaved as if they had been physically displaced to the locations where the
magnetic fields exist in nature and were attempting to home from each
site.
|
To test the hypothesis that lobsters, like turtles, exploit positional
information in the Earth's magnetic field, lobsters were exposed to fields
replicating those that exist at specific locations in their environment
(Boles and Lohmann, 2003
).
Lobsters tested in a field that exists north of the capture site oriented
southward, whereas those tested in a field like one that exists an equivalent
distance to the south oriented northward
(Fig. 5). These results closely
parallel those obtained with juvenile sea turtles
(Fig. 4) and provide strong
evidence that spiny lobsters possess a magnetic map that facilitates
navigation toward specific geographic areas.
|
One caveat is that the newt studies involved combinations of inclination
and intensity that do not precisely match those that exist in nature. Thus, an
important future step will be to determine how newts respond to fields that
actually exist in their environment, as has been done with turtles
(Lohmann et al., 2001
;
Lohmann et al., 2004
) and
lobsters (Boles et al., 2003). Nevertheless, the initial results are
consistent with the hypothesis that newts derive positional information from
the Earth's field, and the existence of magnetic maps in three animals as
evolutionarily distant as turtles, lobsters and newts suggest that such maps
may be phylogenetically widespread.
Although young migratory birds of some species can derive positional
information from the Earth's field during their first migration (e.g.
Fig. 3), whether experienced
birds use magnetic maps when traveling toward specific targets (in the same
way, for example, as juvenile sea turtles;
Fig. 4) is not known. Several
lines of evidence consistent with magnetic maps in adult birds have been
reported, including electrophysiological experiments suggesting high
sensitivity to magnetic field intensity
(Semm and Beason, 1990
),
effects of strong pulsed magnetic fields that are thought to affect a
navigational map (Munro et al.,
1997
; Wiltschko and Wiltschko,
2005
), and a report that the orientation behavior of a migratory
bird was affected by changing the vertical component of the field, a treatment
that also alters inclination angle and total intensity
(Fischer et al., 2003
;
Freake et al., 2006
). Further
investigation of magnetic maps in adult birds appears likely to be
productive.
The possibility that homing pigeons exploit magnetic positional information
as a component of their navigational maps has also been discussed for several
decades. Evidence consistent with the hypothesis includes data showing
increased dispersion when pigeons are released at magnetic anomalies
(Walcott, 1978
;
Gould, 1982
), increased
dispersion correlated with temporal changes in the field
(Keeton et al., 1974
), the
identification of possible magnetic intensity receptors
(Fleissner et al., 2003
), and
recent analyses suggesting that the flight paths of pigeons are sometimes
affected by subtle magnetic contours
(Dennis et al., 2007
).
Opinions among pigeon experts, however, have remained divided (e.g.
Gould, 1982
;
Walker, 1998
;
Wallraff, 1999
;
Wallraff, 2005
).
| Structure of magnetic maps |
|---|
|
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How then, should we envision magnetic maps? How are they organized, what are their capabilities, what magnetic element or elements are involved, and what magnetic navigational strategies do animals use? The answers to these questions are almost entirely unknown. Below we outline just a few possible ways that magnetic maps might be organized.
| Bicoordinate magnetic maps |
|---|
|
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|
The possibility of bicoordinate magnetic maps has been discussed in the
context of several different animals (e.g.
Lohmann and Lohmann, 1996
;
Phillips, 1996
;
Gould, 1998
). Although the
hypothesis remains viable, direct evidence that any animal uses this kind of
map has not yet been obtained.
| Single-coordinate magnetic maps |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The ability of sea turtles to return to specific feeding or nesting
locations along continental coastlines is one instance of navigation that
hypothetically could be accomplished using only one magnetic parameter
(Lohmann and Lohmann, 1994
;
Lohmann et al., 1999
). Many
feeding grounds and most major sea turtle rookeries are located on continental
coastlines aligned approximately north–south, whereas magnetic isolines
in these areas trend east–west (Fig.
7) (Lohmann et al.,
1999
). Thus, each area of coastline is marked by a unique
inclination angle and intensity, two magnetic elements that hatchling
loggerheads are known to detect (Lohmann
and Lohmann, 1994
; Lohmann and
Lohmann, 1996
).
|
| Traveling along an isoline |
|---|
|
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|
A somewhat similar strategy was proposed to explain how some migratory
birds relocate specific areas at the end of a long migration
(Mouritsen, 2003
). According
to this hypothesis, birds migrate north or south until arriving at a
particular latitude (as indicated by magnetic or other cues), and then search
east and west until the target area is found. This idea can be modified easily
to include a deliberate offset; thus, a bird might bias its path so that it
arrives at an area that is unambiguously east or west of the goal, and then
search along the isoline in the opposite direction to locate the target area.
Whether the strategy is used is not known.
| Magnetic waymark navigation |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The responses of young turtles (Lohmann
et al., 2001
) and birds (Beck
and Wiltschko, 1988
) to regional magnetic fields are presumably
inherited, inasmuch as the animals responded to the fields the first time they
encountered them. Nevertheless, crucial associations between specific fields
and particular directions of travel might also be learned in some cases. An
interesting possibility is that as animals mature and gain migratory
experience, they might learn to recognize magnetic fields associated with a
limited number of important locations along their migratory route, including
those where changes in migratory direction are required. In effect, the
migration might eventually be carried out as a sequence of learned steps, with
each magnetic waymark triggering the appropriate direction for the next
segment of the journey until the goal is reached
(Fig. 9). The idea has some
parallels in the insect navigation literature, inasmuch as ants and bees can
learn to associate compass directions with visual landmarks under some
conditions (Collett et al.,
1998
; Menzel et al.,
1998
; Giurfra and Capaldi,
1999
).
|
| Magnetic maps and secular variation |
|---|
|
|
|---|
It has been argued that functionally useful responses to specific regional
fields, such as those reported in young flycatchers
(Beck and Wiltschko, 1988
) and
sea turtles (Lohmann et al.,
2001
), are unlikely to evolve because of secular variation
(Courtillot et al., 1997
).
This argument, however, overlooks the evolutionary processes that sculpt
behavior as environments change. Although the Earth's field changes over time,
strong selective pressure presumably acts to ensure a continuous match between
the responses of animals and the fields that mark critical locations in
migratory routes at any point in time
(Lohmann and Lohmann, 1998
;
Lohmann et al., 1999
;
Lohmann et al., 2001
). For
example, under present conditions in the North Atlantic, natural selection
presumably removes from the population those young Florida turtles that stray
out of the warm-water gyre, while favoring those with orientation responses
that keep them safely inside. As the magnetic values marking the gyre
boundaries change, turtles that fail to respond `correctly' to the new field
conditions will be quickly eliminated while turtles with slightly different
responses that enhance the likelihood of survival under the new conditions
will persist. Only the genes of the surviving turtles will be passed on, and
in this way, the responses of hatchlings may evolve rapidly in parallel with
the continuously changing field.
Because numerous factors are involved, the effect that secular variation
might have on magnetic map navigation is a complex matter that defies easy
answers (Lohmann and Lohmann,
1998
; Lohmann et al.,
1999
; Lohmann and Lohmann,
2003
). Secular variation varies greatly among different parts of
the world, and whether the drift in field elements poses a problem for an
animal in a given situation depends in part on the navigational strategy used,
the length of time that the animal lives, and whether the animal inherits
magnetic positional information or constantly learns and updates it
(Lohmann et al., 1999
). The
fact that several animals possess functional magnetic maps demonstrates that
such potential complications do not prevent animals from exploiting magnetic
positional information, yet whether secular variation imposes significant
constraints on magnetic navigation in some species or in some parts of the
world remains unknown.
| No universal magnetic map? |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The pattern of variation in magnetic field elements differs greatly among
different geographic areas and may profoundly affect what an animal can do
with magnetic maps. In some parts of the world, the four magnetic elements
shown in Fig. 1 vary in similar
directions over the surface of the Earth. In others, the gradients of
inclination and intensity are oriented almost perpendicularly (e.g.
Fig. 6), so that each location
is marked by a unique magnetic field
(Lohmann and Lohmann, 1996
;
Lohmann et al., 1999
). Thus,
in some areas, an animal might be able to determine position in only one
dimension (for example, whether it is north or south of a goal), whereas in
others, it might be able to assess its position relative to the goal when on
any side of a target area.
A useful parallel can perhaps be drawn between an animal's ability to perceive magnetic fields and our own ability to perceive visual cues. Although nearly all humans possess the physiological ability to perceive visual landmarks, the exact landmarks that we use each day, and the strategies of visual navigation that we employ, are profoundly affected by our experience and what is available in our environment. In the same way, the exact magnetic features that are useful in magnetic maps and the strategies that are followed might differ greatly among different geographic areas. A search for a universal strategy of magnetic map navigation among animals, or even a set of consistent rules within a species, may be as fruitless as a search for a universal set of visual landmarks used by all humans. In each case, what is inherited may be the sensory ability, and exactly how it is used in navigation may depend upon local conditions.
Unraveling the mystery of how magnetic maps are organized, and how animals exploit magnetic positional information to guide their movements, will be a challenging undertaking. Nevertheless, the effort appears likely to provide considerable insight into the age-old enigma of how animals find their way in the world.
| Acknowledgments |
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