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BOU Register of Avian Thesis AbstractsJacqueline ChappellThe psychology of homing pigeon navigationInstitution: University of Oxford, U.K. Current Address: School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham, U.K. (Oct 2005) Subject Keywords: navigation, sun compass, spatial learning, pigeon, orientation Species Keywords: Homing pigeon Columba livia
Abstract: Recent experiments have shown that pigeons (Columba livia) use visual landmarks in homing from a familiar site, but the exact role of landmarks in the familiar area map is still unknown. In this thesis, the mechanism of visual landmark use is investigated using an open-field arena food-finding task. The arena allows landmarks to be manipulated independently of the sun compass. Pigeons appeared to rely primarily on the sun compass outdoors to locate the direction of a target goal, rather than prominent two-dimensional visual cues. However, similar experiments indoors, where the sun compass was unavailable, suggested that this reliance may have been due to a specific lack of salience in the two-dimensional visual cues provided. Pigeons were unable to locate the target goal consistently indoors when only two-dimensional cues were present and they had no view of the experimental room, but they were able to perform the task when a three-dimensional cue was added. The addition of the same three-dimensional cue outdoors reversed the reliance on the sun compass: pigeons now relied primarily on the visual cues rather than the sun compass to locate the target goal. These results suggest that pigeons may have two strategies available within their familiar area, depending on the type of landmarks available: they can use visual landmarks directly to locate the home direction, or they can use the visual landmarks merely as a label to which a sun compass bearing is attached. Published Papers: Chappell, J. & Guilford, T. 1997. The orientational significance of visual cues to the homing pigeon. Animal Behaviour 53: 287-296.Chappell, J. & Guilford, T. 1995. Homing pigeons use the sun compass rather than fixed directional visual cues in an open-field arena food-searching task. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B 260:59-63 Chappell, J, 1997. An analysis of clock-shift experiments: is scatter increased and deflection reduced in clock-shifted homing pigeons? Journal of Experimental Biology 200: 2269-2277. Wallraff, H.G., Chappell, J. & Guilford, T. 1999. The roles of the sun and the landscape in pigeon homing. Journal of Experimental Biology 202: 2121-2126. |
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