How do homing pigeons find their way home?

15 March 2009

PIGEON

A pigeon

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Question

How is it that homing pigeons find their way home?

Answer

Chris - This has been an area of intense research in recent years...

It turns out that pigeons an a number of other species including bats have metal deposits in their heads. These metal deposits, haematite, they're iron and they're magnetically sensitive. They use the Earth's magnetic field as a kind of compass. What they do, they know the sun rises in the east and sets in the west and so by using sunrise and sunset they are able to gain a timing. They set their compass according to where the sun is at certain times. That gives them their compass directions. By changing their orientation relative to the Earth's magnetic field they are able to navigate. They use this as a broad directional cue. At the same time they also use visual cues because they have the hippocampus part of their brain which registers where they are in relation to their environment. They remember visual landmarks and marry them together so they know where they're going and how they get home.

Comments

Incorrect information. Some animals have magnetite sensors to find earths magnetic lines. Hematite is not iron metal, it is iron oxide. There is a big difference. Hematite is not magnetic because it is iron oxide. Magnetite is a complex iron oxide and is magnetic.

Thanks for pointing out that error. Yes, I meant magnetite!

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