Naive songbirds show seasonally appropriate spring orientation in the laboratory despite having never completed first migration

Author:

Wynn Joe1ORCID,Leberecht Bo23ORCID,Liedvogel Miriam14ORCID,Burnus Lars23,Chetverikova Raisa23,Döge Sara23,Karwinkel Thiemo123ORCID,Kobylkov Dmitry235,Xu Jingjing23,Mouritsen Henrik23

Affiliation:

1. Institut für Vogelforschung “Vogelwarte Helgoland”, An Der Vogelwarte 21, 26386, Wilhelmshaven, Germany

2. AG ‘Neurosensorik/Animal Navigation’, Carl-von-Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany

3. Research Centre for Neurosensory Sciences, University of Oldenburg, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany

4. MPRG Behavioural Genomics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, 24306 Plön, Germany

5. Center for Mind/Brain Science, University of Trento, Piazza Manifattura 1, 38068 Rovereto, TN, Italy

Abstract

The role of inherited orientation programmes in determining the outbound migratory routes of birds is increasingly well understood, though less is known about the influence of inherited information on return migration. Previous studies suggest that spatial gradient cues learnt through experience could be of considerable importance when relocating the natal site, though such cues could, in principle, augment rather than replace inherited migratory information. Here, we show that juvenile Eurasian blackcaps ( Sylvia atricapilla ) that have never left northwest Europe (i.e. never had the opportunity to learn navigational information on a continental scale) show significant spring orientation in a direction near-identical to that expected based on ringing recoveries from free-flying individuals. We suggest that this is probably indicative of birds inheriting an orientation programme for spring as well as autumn migration and speculate that, as long as the birds are not displaced far from their normal migration route, the use of inherited spring migratory trajectories might make uni-coordinate ‘stop signs’ sufficiently accurate for the long-distance targeting of their breeding sites.

Funder

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

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