Homing pigeon navigational ontogeny: no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learning

The navigational mechanisms of homing pigeons, Columba livia, have been extensively studied and represent a useful model for the navigation of birds and other animals. Pigeons navigate with an olfactory map and sun compass from unfamiliar areas and, in familiar areas, are largely guided by visual la...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Morford, J, Gagliardo, A, Guilford, T
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024
_version_ 1826313840703307776
author Morford, J
Gagliardo, A
Guilford, T
author_facet Morford, J
Gagliardo, A
Guilford, T
author_sort Morford, J
collection OXFORD
description The navigational mechanisms of homing pigeons, Columba livia, have been extensively studied and represent a useful model for the navigation of birds and other animals. Pigeons navigate with an olfactory map and sun compass from unfamiliar areas and, in familiar areas, are largely guided by visual landscape cues, following stereotyped and idiosyncratic routes. However, the mechanisms by which they gain familiarity, improve their navigation and transition between navigational strategies during learning are not fully understood. Addressing these outstanding questions in this navigational model will help to improve our understanding of navigational ontogeny. We sought to investigate whether passive exposure to the cues at a site, without release, was sufficient for navigational learning, given that pigeons can determine the home direction before taking off. We exposed pigeons to cues at a novel site before returning them to the site the next day and releasing them alongside controls. We found no differences in the directional distributions, mean vector lengths, virtual vanishing times, efficiency indices or homing efficiency indices between birds that had and had not previously visited the site. We therefore found no evidence to suggest that passive exposure to the cues at a novel site was sufficient to facilitate a detectable improvement in navigational performance. There are three possible explanations for this result: first, a larger sample size would have detected a weak effect of learning; second, passive exposure to a release site is insufficient to generate navigational learning; and third, pigeons learn from passive exposure but do not rely upon this information, showing no difference in performance, despite learning. We discuss these three explanations with reference to previous findings on navigational learning in homing pigeons. We suggest that experiments should continue to examine navigational ontogeny in homing pigeons to help address this major problem for the field of navigation.
first_indexed 2024-04-23T23:27:11Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:e70968e1-1f63-4fba-ab24-fee69481f886
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:22:52Z
publishDate 2024
publisher Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:e70968e1-1f63-4fba-ab24-fee69481f8862024-08-14T10:55:05ZHoming pigeon navigational ontogeny: no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learningJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e70968e1-1f63-4fba-ab24-fee69481f886EnglishSymplectic ElementsElsevier2024Morford, JGagliardo, AGuilford, TThe navigational mechanisms of homing pigeons, Columba livia, have been extensively studied and represent a useful model for the navigation of birds and other animals. Pigeons navigate with an olfactory map and sun compass from unfamiliar areas and, in familiar areas, are largely guided by visual landscape cues, following stereotyped and idiosyncratic routes. However, the mechanisms by which they gain familiarity, improve their navigation and transition between navigational strategies during learning are not fully understood. Addressing these outstanding questions in this navigational model will help to improve our understanding of navigational ontogeny. We sought to investigate whether passive exposure to the cues at a site, without release, was sufficient for navigational learning, given that pigeons can determine the home direction before taking off. We exposed pigeons to cues at a novel site before returning them to the site the next day and releasing them alongside controls. We found no differences in the directional distributions, mean vector lengths, virtual vanishing times, efficiency indices or homing efficiency indices between birds that had and had not previously visited the site. We therefore found no evidence to suggest that passive exposure to the cues at a novel site was sufficient to facilitate a detectable improvement in navigational performance. There are three possible explanations for this result: first, a larger sample size would have detected a weak effect of learning; second, passive exposure to a release site is insufficient to generate navigational learning; and third, pigeons learn from passive exposure but do not rely upon this information, showing no difference in performance, despite learning. We discuss these three explanations with reference to previous findings on navigational learning in homing pigeons. We suggest that experiments should continue to examine navigational ontogeny in homing pigeons to help address this major problem for the field of navigation.
spellingShingle Morford, J
Gagliardo, A
Guilford, T
Homing pigeon navigational ontogeny: no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learning
title Homing pigeon navigational ontogeny: no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learning
title_full Homing pigeon navigational ontogeny: no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learning
title_fullStr Homing pigeon navigational ontogeny: no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learning
title_full_unstemmed Homing pigeon navigational ontogeny: no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learning
title_short Homing pigeon navigational ontogeny: no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learning
title_sort homing pigeon navigational ontogeny no evidence that exposure to a novel release site is sufficient for learning
work_keys_str_mv AT morfordj homingpigeonnavigationalontogenynoevidencethatexposuretoanovelreleasesiteissufficientforlearning
AT gagliardoa homingpigeonnavigationalontogenynoevidencethatexposuretoanovelreleasesiteissufficientforlearning
AT guilfordt homingpigeonnavigationalontogenynoevidencethatexposuretoanovelreleasesiteissufficientforlearning