THE FASCINATING
KNIGHTS OF THE SKY
Published with permission
PIGEON HOMING: OBSERVATIONS, EXPERIMENTS AND CONFUSIONS
AUTHOR: Dr. CHARLES WALCOTT
Homing pigeons can return from distant, unfamiliar release points. Experienced pigeons can do so even, if they are transported, anesthetized and deprived of outward journey information. Airplane tracking has shown that they make relatively straight tracks on their homeward journey; therefore, pigeons must have some way of determining the home direction at the release site. Manipulating the pigeons internal clock caused predictable deviations in their flight direction relative to home. When the sun is not visible, such clock shifts have no effect. This result implies a two-step system: the determining of the home direction and the use of a sun compass to fly in that direction. When pigeons cannot see the sun they use a magnetic compass. The use of compass cues to select and maintain a direction of flight is well understood compared with the uncertainty surrounding the nature of the clues used to determine the home direction when pigeons are released at unfamiliar site. Because they generally home successfully from any direction and distance from the loft, without requiring information gathered on the outward journey, it seems likely that they use some form of coordinate system. Presumably, a displaced pigeon compares the values of some factor at the release site with its remembered value at home loft. This factor might be olfactory, it might be some Feature of the earth's magnetic field or it might be something else. There is some evidence that pigeons may use several cues and that pigeons raised in different lofts under different environmental conditions may prefer to use one cue over another. I believe that it is this flexible use of multiple cues that has led to much confusion in experiments on pigeon homing.Summary
This ability to return home from unfamiliar locations raises the question of that sensory cues pigeons use both to determine the direction toward home and to maintain their flight in that direction. These are two quite distinct processes. In the first, a pigeon must determine the direction to fly in order to reach home. Because in human terms, this task is something we accomplish by using a map or chart, this position-finding step is often called the 'map'. the term 'map' has unfortunate connotations. It suggest the the pigeon has a special representation of the environment. Actually, all the pigeon needs is a direction towards the loft. Once a direction to fly has been decided upon, a pigeon might use some other cue as a compass to keep on the course (Kramer 1953)
Pigeons can home under a wide variety of conditions. They fly when the sun is visible and when it is not. With training they will even fly at night. they fly with both head and tail winds, but they land in heavy rain. Indeed, what is remarkable about their homing is that only a few experimental manipulations, such as anosmia and release at certain locations prevent a pigeon from reaching home.
Young pigeons seem to make use of information obtained on the outward
journey in order to return home. (Wiltschko and Wiltschko, 1978). Older
pigeons transported to the release site inside sealed metal containers,
supplied with bottled air; anesthetized and placed on rotating tables,
all of which should make it hard for them to keep tract of their outward
journey, will home (Wallraff, 1980; Wallraff et al. 1980). this
ability implies that these pigeons are able to deturmine the direction
toward home without using information obtained on the outward journey.
Since, in contrast to honeybees, pigeons can orient towards home whatever
the direction and distance (within 1800 km or so from home) from which
they are released, it must be concluded that they can truly "navigate"
i.e. they are able to determine the direction of the home loft from any
release point.
Pigeons seem to adopt a home loft at about 6 weeks of age. Before
that time, a pigeon will adopt any loft as home; after that it becomes
difficult to train birds to a new loft location. There are reports that
the Army Pigeon Corps had a way of training pigeons to constantly changing
loft locations, but this was clearly a difficult and laborious procedure.
(War Department 1921, 1945). Once the loft location is adopted as home,
it seems to last throughout a pigeon's life. I have had birds return to
their original loft at Harvard University after being held prisoners in
the Lincoln, Massachusetts, loft for 7 years! the process of getting young
birds to adopt a new loft seems to be hastened and made more effective
by allowing them to fly around the loft, but this is not absolutely required.
Birds reared in a loft with no external experience can still home, abet
slowly and with poor success (Wallraff 1979)
One of the most direct approaches to understanding pigeon homing is to follow the birds on their trip. Hitchcock (1952, 1953) and Griffin (1952) followed flocks visually in an airplane. Talkington (1967) and Graue (1963, 1965) used helicopters, as did Fiaschi et al. (1981). Michener and Walcott (1967) followed radio-tagged pigeons in airplanes and recently Bramanti et al. (1988) put individual flight recorders on the backs of pigeons homing in Italy. All the tracks from these experiments show that unmanipulated pigeons fly on relatively straight paths to the home loft. Taken together; the tracks suggest that a displaced pigeon had a clear idea about the direction to its home loft at the outset. And it is this outset orientation that is captured by the "vanishing direction", the direction in which a pigeon disappears from the view of an observer with binoculars at the release site.
If one looks at the vanishing directions of large groups of pigeons at different sites, rarely do all pigeons choose the same direction; their is scatter in the pigeons choices. Furthermore, there are differences related to the particular release site which Keeton (1973) called "release site biases" As Fig 1 shows. Cornell pigeons provide several dramatic examples: at Castor Hill, North of Ithaca, the vanishing bearing of Cornell pigeons tend to be deflected to the west. Yet pigeons home normally from the site. At Jersey Hill, 132 km west of Ithaca, Cornell pigeons are disoriented and homing performance is very poor. Releasing pigeons raised in different loft locations at both of these sites shows that their behavior differs between these sites. these results, together with those of Schmidt-Koenig (1963) and many others indicate that a pigeon's orientation is a function both of its home loft location and of the release site.
Pigeons equipped with frosted lenses, depriving them of visual landmarks still orient; some even find the loft (Schliechte and Schmidt-Koeing 1971; Schmidt-Koeing and Walcott 1978). Clearly, detailed visual information is not essential for navigation. The same is true for birds whose cochleas have been destroyed; orientation was not affected (G.A. Manley, personal communications) Apparently, acoustic information is not required either.
Clock-shifts, in which a bird's internal sense of time is altered
do have an effect under most sunny conditions. A pigeon with a 6h clock-shift
makes on average 90 deg. error in its homeward vanishing bearing; the direction
of the error depends upon the direction of the shift (Schmidt-Koenig 1960,
1990; Schmidt-Koenig: et al. 1991)
This error occurs even at very short distances from the lofts, although
familiar landmarks are presumable visible (Graue, 1963, Alexander 1975).
It also occurs in both familiar and unfamiliar release points (Fuller et
al. 1985) Somewhat surprisingly, the exact amount of the error may vary
depending on the release point used. There are places around Ithaca, N.Y.
where a 6h clock-shift results in errors of less than 40 deg. to
more than 110 deg in the pigeons vanishing bearings. Many birds with a
6 h clock-shift never home. Birds with smaller clock-shifts exhibit smaller
errors and better homing success. Most pigeon researchers report similar
results. Keeton (1969) reported that his 6 hr clock-shifted pigeons released
under overcast skies were well oriented towards home . this success implies
that the pigeons were not able to see the sun through the clouds and that
furthermore, the sight of the sun was not essential for successful orientation
and homing.
Keeton reasoned that if his pigeons were well oriented under overcast
they must be using a cue other than the sun compass. He found that pigeons
with magnets fastened on their backs were often disoriented when released
under overcast (Keeton 1971; Ioale. 1984) This effect was very conspicuous
at one particular release site (Campbell, N.Y.) but is was much weaker
at other release sites. Pigeons equipped with a pair of coils generating
a magnetic field of the strength of the Earth's natural magnetic
field around their heads had slightly deflected vanishing bearings under
sun. Although the effect was only 10-20 deg. and statistically not
significant from any one release. It was consistent (Walcott 1977), When
the sun was not visible, birds wearing coils with one magnetic polarity
(SUP; the south-seeking needle of a compass placed between the coil pointing
up towards the pigeons head coil) vanished towards home, where as birds
with the coil of the opposite polarity (NUP) vanished in the opposite direction
(Walcott and Green, 1974; Visalberghi and Alleva, 1979)
The behavior of a pigeon wearing a set of head coils depends dramatically
on the visibility of the sun. Under a sunny sky, the coil, whatever their
polarity, only deflected the pigeon's vanishing bearings a few degrees.
If a pigeon wearing an NUP coil starts its homeward journey under
overcast, it will head away from the release point in the direction away
from home. Should the sun appear, even if only momentarily, through a hole
in the clouds, it will reverse course and head directly for home. Where
as the behavior of birds with magnets seem to depend somewhat upon where
they are released, the vanishing bearings of birds with coil seem to be
more consistent. Why this should be is unclear.
Both clock-shifts and magnetic head coil seem to deflect the pigeon's vanishing bearings with respect to the home direction. This observation provides support for Kramer's idea that pigeons homing is a two step process: a 'map' to determine the direction towards home and a compass to guide the bird that direction (Kramer, 1953). The most likely interpretation of the clock-shift experiments is that they have introduced an error into the sun compass system, but since the pigeon flies off at an angle with respect to the home direction. the bird still obviously knows the direction towards home. But a pigeon headed towards home with a 6 h clock-shift (and hence a 90 deg. deflection) might be able to correct its course after a period of flight. We tracked a small number of such birds by airplane and, although their tracks are some what fragmentary, it appears that they approach home in a converging spiral. This must mean that they continue to up date the direction towards home as they fly, each time with the same 90 deg. error. If it were greater than 90 deg, the spiral would never converge on home. If it were less , as in a 2 h shift, convergence would be rapid. Maybe this is why many 2 h sifted birds home more successfully than birds with a 6 h shifts. by looking at the shape of the spiral, one can calculate that the birds with the 6 h shifts must re-compute the direction towards home roughly every 15-30 min.
In Italy and Germany, a long series of ingenious experiments has
provided evidence that olfactory cues are important to pigeon homing (for
reviews see Wallraff 1990: Papi 1980, 1989, 1991) Birds with their olfactory
nerves sectioned neither orient nor home from unfamiliar sites. Pigeons
whose exposure to natural air flow has been manipulated by deflector lofts
or by tunnels show the predicted deflection of their vanishing directions.
Birds transported long distances do not orient unless they are allowed
to sample the natural air on the outward journey; filtering the air through
charcoal eliminates the pigeons ability to orient (Wallraff and Foa. 1981)
These and many other observations make a convincing case that pigeons make
some use of olfactory information in their orientation.
The Earth's magnetic field is another potential 'map' cue. The field
varies in both strength and direction over the Earth's surface. A pigeon
that was able to measure tiny differences in either angle or strength
of the field could at least in theory, tell where it was on the surface
of the Earth. Wiltschko and Wilschko (1998) and Able (1994) have written
excellent reviews on this subject. Infrasound has also been suggested as
a potential map cue. Pigeons are sensitive to very low-frequency sounds
down to 0.1 Hz. Perhaps they use sources of such sounds as acoustic guidepost
(Yodlowski et al. 1977: Kreithern and Quine, 1979). Pigeons can
respond to polarized light patterns (Kriethen and Keeton 1974); they can
also detect ultraviolet light (Kreithen and Eisner, 1978), What role these
abilities might play in their orientation is completely unclear.
The orientation of pigeons exposed either to clock-shift or to magnetic
manipulations suggest that the birds know the direction to home and that
the experimental manipulations are deflecting their vanishing bearings
in relation to this home direction. Clock-shifts and magnetic coils cause
the pigeons to select a wrong compass direction, but the errors that they
make show that the treated birds nevertheless posses information on the
direction of their home loft. If this is so then what is the nature of
the cues that provide information of the home direction?
Let us begin by first excluding several cues. Finding the correct
home direction does not require a view of the sun. Pigeons select the home
direction in the presence of both Earth-strenght and weaker static and
varying magnetic fields. (Lednor and Qalcott 1983) this performance also
does not require acoustic cues G. Manly personal communication) The results
of three sets experiments, described below, suggest that determining the
home direction is based on redundant cues, as in the case of the compass
system.
Pigeons raised in our lofts at Cornell in Ithaca, N.Y. are disoriented
and few home when released at Jersey Hill Fire tower, which is located
132 km west of Ithaca. Birds raised in other lofts, even one as close as
18 km to our Cornell lofts are well oriented at Jersey Hill. Cornell-born
pigeons raised in other lofts are well oriented, pigeons born in other
lofts and raised at Cornell are disoriented. Clearly, being raised at the
Cornell pigeon lofts interferes with orientation at Jersey Hill (Walcott
and Browne 1987).
In Frankfurt, Germany pigeons raised in a loft in the courtyard
of the Zoological Institute are about equally well oriented whether or
not they made anosimic. Then siblings raised on the roof of the four-story
building with access to the free winds became disoriented when made anosmic.
Here, it appears that the cues that the birds use may well depend upon
the circumstances of their rearing (Wiltschko et al. 1989. Wiltschko and
Wiltschko 1989).
In Lincoln, Massachusetts, USA, pigeons raised in one loft were
disoriented when released at a magnetic anomaly, Their siblings raised
in a loft only 2.5 km away were well oriented at the same anomaly. Since
both releases took place under sunny skies, when a sun compass was available,
we are tempted to suggest that one group of birds might have been using
magnetic information to find their homeward direction while their siblings
from the other loft were using some other cue. (Walkout, 1992)
Pigeon behavior differs at familiar and unfamiliar sites. For example,
pigeons released at magnetic anomalies are better oriented on their second
release at the same anomaly. Yet experience at other anomalies does not
help their performance at a test anomaly (Lednor and Walcott, 1988). Experienced
pigeons made anosmic by olfactory nerve section or anesthetics are disoriented
at unfamiliar sites and their homing is poor, whereas at familiar sites,
the same birds both orient and home (Stereng and Wallraff, 1992. Birds
that have been raised in lofts with a view of the landscape home faster
when they are allowed to view the landscape around the release site before
beginning their flight home. (Braithwaite and Newman, 1994: Brainwaite
and Guilford. 1995). Clearly the birds are learning something about the
release site itself. In contrast pigeons released at Jersey Hill show no
great improvement in either their orientation or homing success on subsequent
releases.
Pigeons released at magnetic anomalies, once outside the magnetically
disturbed area, turn and head for home. Much the same is true of pigeons
released at Caston Hill. These birds headed off in an incorrect course
that they later corrected. In contrast, birds tracked from Jersey Hill
continued steadfastly on their incorrect course, with only a small percentage
correcting it towards home (B Moore and R, Madden, personal communication)
What is especially surprising about these Cornell birds released at Jersey
Hill is that they often flew over areas where, had they been released there
in the first place they would have homed well. This is also true of clock-shifted
birds, airplane tracking shows that they continue on their shifted course
even over presumably familiar terrain. The difference is that the clock-shifted
pigeons seem to correct their course. Whereas birds released at Jersey
Hill do not. this difference implies that the clock-shifted birds continually
update their knowledge of the home position whereas birds released at Jersey
Hill seem to have no idea where home is located. Why Cornell birds have
such a problem at Jersey Hill is completely mysterious.
If the map is based on the comparison of some factor at the release
site with its remembered value at home loft, then there seem to be
two categories of places. First there are locations where the comparison
is agreed upon by all birds from a specific loft and where they predominately
choose some direction other than home. At Castor Hill, on the Tug Hill
plateau, Cornell birds are all agreed about the direction to fly even though
it is not the correct direction to home. Here, the comparison of some mysterious
cues leads to a consensus, even if it wrong (Keeton 1973), In the second
category are release sites where the comparison does not yield useful information.
Each pigeon comes to a different conclusion about the direction towards
home, and the pigeons vanish at random. The releases at magnetic anomalies,
as well as the Jersey Hill, releases, belong to the second category. They
differ however, in that Cornell birds released at Jersey Hill never correct
their course and few home successfully,, whereas birds from magnetic anomalies
correct their course and home normally.
A further interesting observation was made when pigeons from our
old Lincoln, Massachusetts, lofts that were disoriented by magnetic anomalies
were released at magnetically normal sites but had to fly over a magnetic
anomaly on their way home. Generally such pigeons flew on normal, straight
homeward course. Occasionally; a pigeon gave evidence of being disoriented
by the anomaly (Fig. 6a in Gould, 1982) this exception provides further
evidence that pigeons determine the direction to at the release site and
only occasionally check positional information on their homeward trip.
All of these experiments suggest that the 'map' or home vector sense
seems to rely on a comparison of some factor which may depend on loft location,
release site and, presumably, available cues. Granzhorn (1989, 1992) analysis
of the various release points for Cornell birds divides them into various
clusters according to the vanishing bearings of the birds. Furthermore
he points out that magnetic manipulations have an effect at some release
sites and olfactory manipulations at others. Clearly, the pigeons' behavior
depends on multiple cues. Which cues they use seems to be a function of
both the loft and its location as well as the release site (Schmidt-Koenig
and Granzhorn 1961) Table 1 summarizes the different potential cues.
Much of the confusion in the pigeon homing story may well result
from the differences among various lofts and release sites. Even such well-known
and agreed upon manipulations as clock shifts have different effects at
different release sites. Given this degree of variability, it should
be no surprise that different investigators obtain different results with
pigeons living in different areas!
| Potential cue | Compass or map | Geographic scale | Evidence | Certainty | Review |
| Sun azimuth | Compass | Hemisphere | Clock shift | High | Schmidt-Koenig et al. (1991) |
| Sun position | Map | ? | None | Out | Schmidt-Koenig (1972. Walcott (1972) |
| Odor, mosaic | Map | Local | Detour Site simulation | Medium | Papi (1991) |
| Odor, gradient | Map | Long-distance | Medium | Walraff (1990) Waldvogel (1989) | |
| Magnitic field | Compass | World | Magnets | High | Wilschko and Wiltschko (1988) |
| Magnetic field | Map | ? | Anomalies | Medium | Able (1994) |
| Visual Landmarks | ? | Local | Frosted Lenses | High | Schlichte (1973); Brainwaite and Guilford (1995) |
| Infrasound | Map | Long | None | ? | Yodlowski et al, (1990) Quine (1983) |
| Polarized light | Compass | Hemisphere | None | Low | Waldvogel (1990) |