Geomagnetic Disturbance and the Orientation of Nocturnally Migrating Birds
- 6 May 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 196 (4290) , 682-684
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.854743
Abstract
Free-flying passerine migrants respond to natural fluctuations in the earth's magnetic field. The variability in flight directions of nocturnal migrants is significantly correlated with increasing geomagnetic disturbance as measured by both the K index and various components of the earth's magnetic field. The results indicate that such disturbances influence the orientation of free-flying migrants, but the evidence is not sufficient to show that geomagnetism is a cue in their orientation system.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Magnetic Direction Finding: Evidence for Its Use in Migratory Indigo BuntingsScience, 1976
- AUTUMN MIGRATION OVER PUERTO RICO AND THE WESTERN ATLANTIC: A RADAR STUDYIbis, 1976
- Solar Structure and Terrestrial WeatherScience, 1976
- Orientation of Gull Chicks Exposed to Project Sanguine's Electromagnetic FieldScience, 1975
- Orientation of Homing Pigeons Altered by a Change in the Direction of an Applied Magnetic FieldScience, 1974
- Environmental influences on the orientation of free-flying nocturnal bird migrantsAnimal Behaviour, 1974
- Magnetic Compass of European RobinsScience, 1972
- GULL ORIENTATION BY MAGNETIC CUES: A HYPOTHESIS REVISITEDAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1971
- Wind and the Direction of Nocturnal Songbird MigrationNature, 1970
- A Portable Ceilometer Technique for Studying Low-Level Nocturnal MigrationBird-Banding, 1969