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The role of daytime cues in the development of magnetic orientation in a night-migrating bird
Authors:Peter Weindler  Frank Böhme  Varis Liepa  Wolfgang Wiltschko
Institution:Fachbereich Biologie der J.W. Goethe-Universit?t, Zoologie, Siesmayerstrasse 70, D-60054 Frankfurt a.M., Germany e-mail: wiltschko@zoology.uni-frankfurt.d400.de, DE
Institute of Biology, Salaspils, Latvia, LV
Abstract:To assess the role of celestial rotation during daytime in the development of the magnetic compass course, pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca Pallas, Muscicapidae) were handraised in Latvia under various celestial and magnetic conditions. Tests were performed during autumn migration in the local geomagnetic field (50 000 nT, 73° inclination) in the absence of celestial cues. A group of birds that had never seen the sky showed a bimodal preference for the migratory southwest-northeast axis, whereas a second group that had been exposed to the natural sky from sunrise to sunset in the local geomagnetic field showed a unimodal preference for the seasonally appropriate southwesterly direction. A third group that had also been exposed to the daytime sky, but in the absence of magnetic compass information, also oriented bimodally along a southwest-northeast axis. These findings demonstrate that observing celestial rotation during daytime enables birds to choose the right end of the migratory axis for autumn migration at the Latvian test location. This transformation of axial behavior into appropriate migratory orientation, however, requires the birds to have simultaneous access to information on both celestial rotation and the geomagnetic field. Received: 19 September 1997 / Accepted after revision: 22 November 1997
Keywords:Migratory orientation  Magnetic field  Celestial rotation  Pied flycatcher
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