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Pacific salmon
inherit magnetic sense of direction
Date:
February 6,
2014
Source:
Oregon State University
Summary:
A team of scientists last year
presented evidence of a correlation between the migration patterns of ocean
salmon and Earth's magnetic field, suggesting it may help explain how the fish
can navigate across thousands of miles of water to find their river of origin.
This week, scientists confirmed the connection between salmon and the magnetic
field.
A team of
scientists last year presented evidence of a correlation between the migration
patterns of ocean salmon and Earth's magnetic field, suggesting it may help
explain how the fish can navigate across thousands of miles of water to find
their river of origin.
This week,
scientists confirmed the connection between salmon and the magnetic field
following a series of experiments at the Oregon Hatchery Research Center in the
Alsea River basin. Researchers exposed hundreds of juvenile Chinook salmon to
different magnetic fields that exist at the latitudinal extremes of their
oceanic range. Fish responded to these "simulated magnetic
displacements" by swimming in the direction that would bring that toward
the center of their marine feeding grounds.
The study,
which was funded by Oregon Sea Grant and the Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife, will be published this month in the forthcoming issue of Current
Biology.
"What
is particularly exciting about these experiments is that the fish we tested had
never left the hatchery and thus we know that their responses were not learned
or based on experience, but rather they were inherited," said Nathan
Putman, a postdoctoral researcher at Oregon State University and lead author on
the study.
"These
fish are programmed to know what to do before they ever reach the ocean,"
he added.
To test the
hypothesis, the researchers constructed a large platform with copper wires
running horizontally and vertically around the perimeter. By running electrical
current through the wires, the scientists could create a magnetic field and
control the both the intensity and inclination angle of the field. They then
placed 2-inch juvenile salmon called "parr" in 5-gallon buckets and,
after an acclimation period, monitored and photographed the direction in which
they were swimming.
Fish presented
with a magnetic field characteristic of the northern limits of the oceanic
range of Chinook salmon were more likely to swim in a southerly direction,
while fish encountering a far southern field tended to swim north. In essence,
fish possess a "map sense" determining where they are and which way
to swim based on the magnetic fields they encounter.
"The
evidence is irrefutable," said co-author David Noakes of OSU, senior
scientist at the Oregon Hatchery Research Center and the 2012 recipient of the
American Fisheries Society's Award of Excellence. "I tell people: The fish
can detect and respond to the Earth's magnetic field. There can be no doubt of
that."
Not all of
the more than 1,000 fish swam in the same direction, Putman said. But there was
a clear preference by the fish for swimming in the direction away from the
magnetic field that was "wrong" for them. Fish that remained in the
magnetic field of the testing site -- near Alsea, Ore. -- were randomly
oriented, indicating that orientation of fish subjected to magnetic
displacements could only be attributable to change in the magnetic field.
"What
is really surprising is that these fish were only exposed to the magnetic field
we created for about eight minutes," Putman pointed out. "And the
field was not even strong enough to deflect a compass needle."
Putman said
that salmon must be particularly sensitive because the Earth's magnetic field
is relatively weak. Because of that, it may not take much to interfere with
their navigational abilities. Many structures contain electrical wires or
reinforcing iron that could potentially affect the orientation of fish early in
their life cycle, the researchers say.
"Fish
are raised in hatcheries where there are electrical and magnetic
influences," Noakes said, "and some will encounter electrical fields
while passing through power dams. When they reach the ocean, they may swim by
structures or cables that could interfere with navigation. Do these have an
impact? We don't yet know."
Putman said
natural disruptions could include chunks of iron in Earth's crust, though
"salmon have been dealing with that for thousands of years."
"Juvenile
salmon face their highest mortality during the period when the first enter the
ocean," Putman said, "because they have to adapt to a saltwater
environment, find food, avoid predation, and begin their journey. Anything that
makes them navigate less efficiently is a concern because if they take a wrong
turn and end up in a barren part of the ocean, they are going to starve."
The magnetic
field is likely not the only tool salmon use to navigate, however, Putman
noted.
"They
likely have a whole suite of navigational aids that help them get where they
are going, perhaps including orientation to the sun, sense of smell and
others," Putman said.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by Oregon State University. Note: Materials may be
edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Nathan F. Putman, Michelle M. Scanlan, Eric J. Billman, Joseph P. O’Neil, Ryan B. Couture, Thomas P. Quinn, Kenneth J. Lohmann, David L.G. Noakes. An Inherited Magnetic Map Guides Ocean Navigation in Juvenile Pacific Salmon. Current Biology, 2014; DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.01.017