
The vector of the geomagnetic field provides animals with directional information, while intensity and/or inclination provide them with positional information. For magnetoreception, two hypotheses are currently discussed: one proposing magnetite-based mechanisms, the other suggesting radical pair processes involving photopigments. Behavioral studies indicate that birds use both mechanisms: they responded to a short, strong magnetic pulse designed to change the magnetization of magnetite particles, while, at the same time, their orientation was found to be light-dependent and could be disrupted by high-frequency magnetic fields in the MHz range, which is diagnostic for radical pair processes. Details of these findings, together with electrophysiological and histological studies, suggest that, in birds, a radical pair mechanism located in the right eye provides directional information for a compass, while a magnetite-based mechanism located in the upper beak records magnetic intensity, thus providing positional information. The mechanisms of magnetoreception in other animals have not yet been analyzed in detail.
Behavior, Animal, Sensory Receptor Cells, Light, Radio Waves, Models, Biological, Ferrosoferric Oxide, Electrophysiology, Magnetics, Magnetic Fields, Animals, Animal Migration
Behavior, Animal, Sensory Receptor Cells, Light, Radio Waves, Models, Biological, Ferrosoferric Oxide, Electrophysiology, Magnetics, Magnetic Fields, Animals, Animal Migration
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