Author:
Hiscock Hamish G.,Worster Susannah,Kattnig Daniel R.,Steers Charlotte,Jin Ye,Manolopoulos David E.,Mouritsen Henrik,Hore P. J.
Abstract
Migratory birds have a light-dependent magnetic compass, the mechanism of which is thought to involve radical pairs formed photochemically in cryptochrome proteins in the retina. Theoretical descriptions of this compass have thus far been unable to account for the high precision with which birds are able to detect the direction of the Earth's magnetic field. Here we use coherent spin dynamics simulations to explore the behavior of realistic models of cryptochrome-based radical pairs. We show that when the spin coherence persists for longer than a few microseconds, the output of the sensor contains a sharp feature, referred to as a spike. The spike arises from avoided crossings of the quantum mechanical spin energy-levels of radicals formed in cryptochromes. Such a feature could deliver a heading precision sufficient to explain the navigational behavior of migratory birds in the wild. Our results (i) afford new insights into radical pair magnetoreception, (ii) suggest ways in which the performance of the compass could have been optimized by evolution, (iii) may provide the beginnings of an explanation for the magnetic disorientation of migratory birds exposed to anthropogenic electromagnetic noise, and (iv) suggest that radical pair magnetoreception may be more of a quantum biology phenomenon than previously realized.
Funder
EC | European Research Council
DOD | Air Force Office of Scientific Research
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Volkswagen Foundation
EMF Biological Research Trust
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
148 articles.
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