38-year-old researcher Kasper Thorup, University of Copenhagen, has come a step closer to unravelling the secret of how migration birds navigate across large distances. He has followed the birds’ passage across USA from small sports planes. The results are now being published in the scientific journal PNAS.
Every year, millions of songbirds cover thousands of kilometres to spend winter in a mild climate. Biologist Kasper Thorup has participated in a large American research project on how the migratory songbirds find their way across these long distances; in this case from the American East Coast to the northern West Coast in Washington State. It is the first time researchers have followed the birds over such a long distance.
What makes this project stand out is that the birds were equipped with a small transmitter which could be located and followed from small planes. The 30 white-crowned sparrows that were included in the experiment were brought by plane from their migratory passage in Washington State to Princeton University, New Jersey and then set free. The experiment was to see if they could find their way back to their original passage on the West Coast.
It was surprising to see how fast and safely the older birds were able to navigate back towards their winter quarters, just as it was surprising to see how the younger birds were not able to make course-corrections on their way, as they are used to navigate across great distances.
”The experiments show that the older birds’ “GPS” work across very great distances. But the fact that they were removed in a different direction from their passage makes it difficult for them to navigate using the earth’s magnetic field. Therefore it is still a puzzle how exactly their navigation works. Maybe they use the sun, moon and start or maybe they use their sense of smell. So the next step is to test these possibilities”, says Kasper Thorup.
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