MAGNETIC RESPONSE OF AN ORGANISM AND ITS LUNAR RELATIONSHIPS
Open Access
- 1 June 1960
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The Biological Bulletin
- Vol. 118 (3) , 382-392
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1538816
Abstract
The direction and pattern of distribution of snails, Nassarius obsoleta, emerging from a straight, south-directed corridor into a constant symmetrical field displayed lunar-day and synodic-monthly periodisms. The snail''s mean path turned slightly to the right near moonrise, and then increasingly to the left, to a maximum at lunar nadir. Response to experimental magnetic fields of about 1.5 gausses showed the character of the magnetic response to vary with time of lunar day. The increased field strength induced the snails to do more strongly whatever was characteristic of that time of lunar-day in the earth''s field alone. The magnet, therefore, effected maximum right-turning about moonrise, and maximum left-turning at lunar nadir. There was a synodic monthly rhythm of mean daily response to the weak experimental magnetic fields, maximum right-turning in the daytime occurring the day before new moons and full moons, and maximum left-turning the day before each of the moon''s quarters. The strength of response to a bar magnet exhibited also a significant correlation with barometric pressure changes, suggesting strongly some relationship to previously reported, pressure-correlated cell-oxidative changes in the snails and other organisms even when sealed in constant pressure.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- MAGNETIC RESPONSE OF AN ORGANISM AND ITS SOLAR RELATIONSHIPSThe Biological Bulletin, 1960
- THE REPETITION OF PATTERN IN THE RESPIRATION OF UCA PUGNAXThe Biological Bulletin, 1958
- Comparisons of Some Fluctuations in Cosmic Radiation and in Organismic Activity During 1954, 1955 and 1956American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1958