Homing
Animals "home" when they return to a central place, such as their nest or their territory. Homing is a frequent activity, occurring after foraging bouts or other relatively local movements. This distinguishes homing from migration, which is a long-distance movement between two distinct habitats. The key element to understanding homing behavior is determining which cues provide the directional information that allows animals to move between their home and other locations.
Homing is the return of an individual to its home site.
Animals leave their homes to find food, mates, etc., and return for shelter, feeding of young, etc. Environmental cues such as light, chemicals, magnetism, and visual landmarks are used to find the home base.
A. Honeybees (Apis mellifera)
Like many other animals, honeybees forage from a fixed location, the hive. This type of foraging, often termed "central-place foraging," imposes a requirement for good navigation abilities; the animal must be able to find its way back home after a foraging bout which may take it away from visual or auditory contact with the nest and its residents. Honeybees may forage several kilometers from their hive, making them a good model species for studying navigation in central-place foragers.
Information used in home-based navigation can be divided into two categories:
How do bees incorporate landmarks into their orientation?
Two basic models, snapshot memory, and cognitive maps, have been proposed. The simplest, and probably correct, model calls for the bee to remember a series of visual images ("snapshots") of the landscape as it passes. The bee also remembers images of particularly prominent landscape features. These images can then be compared with the actual landscape surrounding the bee at any given moment. More complex is the "cognitive map" model, which requires the bee to construct a relatively complete neural representation of the landscape based on its experiences while flying. Tests of the cognitive map model require that displaced bees calculate a novel route home, based on their memory of the landscape map (as humans might).
B. Homing behavior in pigeons (Columba livia)
Pigeons find their way home from unfamiliar sites up to thousands of kilometers from their roost. Pigeon races may feature releases of birds from France, for example, which then find their way home to sites in England or the Netherlands. The extraordinary reliability of homing pigeons makes them excellent subjects for studies of navigation.
How do pigeons find their way home when deposited in an unfamiliar location?
To do this, they must have two kinds of information:
Regular, annual, or seasonal mass movements made by animals from their breeding area to another area.
"True migration" refers to the animal making a return trip back to the original breeding grounds, while "one-way migration" often occurs when the habitat deteriorates or the food source is depleted.
Eastern bar-tailed godwits:
One exceptional long-distance migrant is the eastern bar-tailed godwit, which makes a record-breaking non-stop flight over the Pacific Ocean from Alaska to New Zealand. This journey of 11,000 kilometers takes six to eight days and nights of continuous flight, averaging over 60 kilometers per hour. The departure is timed to gain assistance from favorable winds. The birds arrive exhausted and weighing less than half their original weight. They remain for around five months before making the return journey along the western edge of the Pacific.
Why migrate?
Migration enables animals to live in an ideal environment with a good food supply all year. However, there are advantages and disadvantages to migration.
Advantages of migration:
Disadvantages of migration:
Migrations can be triggered by internal or external factors:
Navigation:
Navigation involves an animal finding its way over unknown territory to a known destination.
Methods used by animals to navigate (homing and migration):
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1. What is homing in relation to migration? |
2. How do animals navigate during migration? |
3. What factors influence an animal's migratory behavior? |
4. How does migration benefit animals? |
5. What are the challenges faced by migratory animals? |
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