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Magnetic versus celestial cues: cue-conflict experiments with migrating silvereyes at dusk
Authors:W Wiltschko  R Wiltschko  U Munro  H Ford
Institution:Fachbereich Biologie der J.W.-Goethe-Universit?t, Zoologie, Siesmayerstrasse 70, D-60054 Frankfurt a.M., Germany Fax: +49 798 24820 e-mail: wiltschko@zoology.uni-frankfurt.d400.de, DE
The University of Adelaide, Department of Zoology, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia, AU
Department of Zoology, The University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia, GB
Abstract:To assess the relative importance of celestial and magnetic cues for orientation at dusk, Australian silvereyes, Zosterops l. lateralis, were subjected to artificial magnetic fields under the natural evening sky, beginning 30 min before sunset. Control birds tested in the local geomagnetic field preferred their normal south-southwesterly migratory direction. Birds tested in a magnetic field with north deflected counterclockwise to 240°WSW showed northeasterly tendencies from the first test onward. Birds subjected to a corresponding clockwise deflection to 120°ESE, in contrast, first showed southerly directions, but from the 7th test onward shifted towards the northwest. Hence, both experimental groups followed the shift in magnetic north, one immediately, the other after a delay. When the birds were later tested in a vertical magnetic field without directional information, the two experimental groups continued in the direction they had preferred in the artificial magnetic fields, presumably by celestial cues alone. This indicates that they had not simply ignored celestial cues, but had recalibrated them according to the altered magnetic fields. The reasons for the initial difference between the two experimental groups remain unclear. Delayed responses to deflections of magnetic north have also been observed in previous studies. They appear to be the main reason why studies that expose birds only once to a cue-conflict situation often seem to indicate a dominance of celestial cues, whereas studies exposing the birds repeatedly usually indicate a dominance of magnetic cues. Accepted: 17 September 1997
Keywords:Migratory orientation  Celestial cues  Magnetic field  Cue-conflict  Zosterops lateralis
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