Very weak oscillating magnetic field disrupts the magnetic compass of songbird migrants

Author:

Pakhomov Alexander12ORCID,Bojarinova Julia23,Cherbunin Roman23,Chetverikova Raisa34,Grigoryev Philipp S.3,Kavokin Kirill235,Kobylkov Dmitry4,Lubkovskaja Regina3,Chernetsov Nikita123

Affiliation:

1. Biological Station Rybachy, Zoological Institute RAS, 238535 Rybachy, Kaliningrad Region, Russia

2. Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, 44 Thorez Ave, 194223 St Petersburg, Russia

3. St Petersburg State University, 7-9 Universitetskaya Emb., St Petersburg 199034, Russia

4. AG Neurosensorik (Animal Navigation), Institut für Biologie und Umweltwissenschaften (IBU), University of Oldenburg, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany

5. A.F. Ioffe Physical Technical Institute, 26 Polytechnicheskaya, St Petersburg 194021, Russia

Abstract

Previously, it has been shown that long-distance migrants, garden warblers ( Sylvia borin ), were disoriented in the presence of narrow-band oscillating magnetic field (1.403 MHz OMF, 190 nT) during autumn migration. This agrees with the data of previous experiments with European robins ( Erithacus rubecula ). In this study, we report the results of experiments with garden warblers tested under a 1.403 MHz OMF with various amplitudes (∼0.4, 1, ∼2.4, 7 and 20 nT). We found that the ability of garden warblers to orient in round arenas using the magnetic compass could be disrupted by a very weak oscillating field, such as an approximate 2.4, 7 and 20 nT OMF, but not by an OMF with an approximate 0.4 nT amplitude. The results of the present study indicate that the sensitivity threshold of the magnetic compass to the OMF lies around 2–3 nT, while in experiments with European robins the birds were disoriented in a 15 nT OMF but could choose the appropriate migratory direction when a 5 nT OMF was added to the stationary magnetic field. The radical-pair model, one of the mainstream theories of avian magnetoreception, cannot explain the sensitivity to such a low-intensity OMF, and therefore, it needs further refinement.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Zoological Institute RAS

Saint Petersburg State University

Russian Foundation for Basic Research

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biochemistry,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biophysics,Biotechnology

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