In the new work, researchers including Rafael Freire from the University of New England (Australia), Wolfgang Wiltschko and Roswitha Wiltschko from the University of Frankfurt, Germany, and Ursula Munro from the University of Technology in Sydney, demonstrated for the first time that birds could be trained to respond to a magnetic direction. The researchers trained domestic chicks to find an object that was associated with imprinting and was behind one of four screens placed in the corners of a square apparatus, and, crucially, showed that the chicks' direction of movement during searching for the hidden imprinting stimulus was influenced by shifting the magnetic field.
One important difference between this work and earlier attempts to train birds is that the researchers used a social stimulus to train the birds, whereas most previous attempts have used food as the reward. The authors of the study hypothesize that in nature, birds do not use magnetic signals to find food, and tests involving such a response may be alien to them.
It is expected that this work will facilitate current efforts to understand how birds detect the magnetic field, because the new approach does not rely on complex behaviors, such as migration or homing, that are difficult to study in the laboratory and are dependent on the time of year. The work also shows that the ability to orient with magnetic cues is not only present in an ancient avian lineage dating back to the cretaceous period, but has also been retained in a nonmigrating bird after thousands of years of domestication.
The researchers include Rafael Freire and Lesley J. Rogers of the University of New England in Armidale, NSW, Australia; Ursula H. Munro of the University of Technology in Sydney, Australia; and Roswitha Wiltschko and Wolfgang Wiltschko of the Zoologisches Institut der J.W.Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt Main, Germany. This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (W.W.), the Human Frontier Sciences Program (R.W.) and a University of New England VC post-doctoral fellowship (R.F.).
Freire et al.: "Chickens orient using a magnetic compass" Publishing in Current Biology, Vol. 15, R620-R621, August 23, 2005 www.current-biology.com
Journal
Current Biology