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The roles of the sun and the landscape in pigeon homing.

Abstract:
It seems reasonable to assume that pigeons use visual features in the landscape for orientation when they are homing over familiar terrain. Experimental evidence to prove or disprove this possibility is, however, difficult to obtain. Here, we link the problem with the observation that deflections of initial orientation caused by clock-shift are often smaller than predicted on a pure sun compass basis. We substantiate the hypothesis that consistently reduced deflections and increased angular scatter occur only when pigeons are released in familiar areas where a remembered pattern of landscape features can conflict with the position of the sun. Repeated releases of the same individuals under clock-shift, or elimination of non-visual navigational clues (odours), appear to strengthen the conflicting influence of familiar visual landmarks. Accelerated returns of birds allowed to preview the surrounding familiar scenery before release also support the conclusion that the visual environment is included in the homing system of pigeons. The landscape, however, not only helps home-finding, if it is familiar, but may also have a distracting influence that contributes to the great variability of initial orientation patterns.

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Journal:
Journal of experimental biology More from this journal
Volume:
202
Issue:
Pt 16
Pages:
2121-2126
Publication date:
1999-01-01
EISSN:
1477-9145
ISSN:
0022-0949


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:386925
UUID:
uuid:ec59e81f-dafa-4ed7-b574-5ee7e01f7385
Local pid:
pubs:386925
Source identifiers:
386925
Deposit date:
2013-11-16
ARK identifier:

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