The amphibian magnetic sense(s)

被引:0
作者
John B. Phillips
Francisco J. Diego-Rasilla
机构
[1] Virginia Tech,Department of Biological Sciences
[2] Spanish Herpetological Society,undefined
[3] MNCN,undefined
来源
Journal of Comparative Physiology A | 2022年 / 208卷
关键词
Magnetoreception; Light-dependent magnetic compass; Magnetite; Magnetic map; Quantum biology; Spatial cognition;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Sensitivity to the earth’s magnetic field is the least understood of the major sensory systems, despite being virtually ubiquitous in animals and of widespread interest to investigators in a wide range of fields from behavioral ecology to quantum physics. Although research on the use of magnetic cues by migratory birds, fish, and sea turtles is more widely known, much of our current understanding of the functional properties of vertebrate magnetoreception has come from research on amphibians. Studies of amphibians established the presence of a light-dependent magnetic compass, a second non-light-dependent mechanism involving particles of magnetite and/or maghemite, and an interaction between these two magnetoreception mechanisms that underlies the “map” component of homing. Simulated magnetic displacement experiments demonstrated the use of a high-resolution magnetic map for short-range homing to breeding ponds requiring a sampling strategy to detect weak spatial gradients in the magnetic field despite daily temporal variation at least an order of magnitude greater. Overall, reliance on a magnetic map for short-range homing places greater demands on the underlying sensory detection, processing, and memory mechanisms than comparable mechanisms used by long-distance migrants. Moreover, unlike sea turtles and migratory birds, amphibians are exceptionally well suited to serve as model organisms in which to characterize the molecular and biophysical mechanisms underlying the light-dependent ‘quantum compass’.
引用
收藏
页码:723 / 742
页数:19
相关论文
共 297 条
  • [1] Adler K(1973)Extraocular perception of polarized light by orienting salamanders J Comp Physiol 87 203-212
  • [2] Taylor DH(1996)Geomagnetic map used for long–distance navigation? Trends Ecol Evol 11 398-400
  • [3] Åkesson S(2020)Electron-electron dipolar interaction poses a challenge to the radical pair mechanism of magnetoreception J Phys Chem Lett 11 2414-2421
  • [4] Babcock NS(2021)Radical scavenging could answer the challenge posed by electron–electron dipolar interactions in the cryptochrome compass model JACS Au 1 2033-2046
  • [5] Kattnig DR(1989)Turbulent transfer in a deciduous forest Tree Physiol 5 357-377
  • [6] Babcock NS(1999)Ferromagnetic material in the eastern red-spotted newt J Exp Biol 202 3155-3160
  • [7] Kattnig DR(1987)The effect of post-metamorphic dispersal on the population genetic structure of Fowler’s toad, Copeia 1987 386-395
  • [8] Baldocchi DD(2015)Evidence for geomagnetic imprinting and magnetic navigation in the natal homing of sea turtles Curr Biol 25 392-396
  • [9] Brassart J(2018)Evidence that magnetic navigation and geomagnetic imprinting shape spatial genetic variation in sea turtles Curr Biol 28 1325-1329
  • [10] Kirschvink JL(1990)Magnetic compass orientation in the subterranean rodent Experientia 46 528-530