2005
DOI: 10.1556/abiol.56.2005.3-4.5
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An experimental analysis on the magnetic field sensitivity of the black-meadow antFormica pratensisRetzius (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

Abstract: Ant responses were tested under both the natural geomagnetic and artificially induced Earth-strength electromagnetic field. Foragers were trained for a month to visit a food source at the north arm accessed through an orientation platform assembly. Under the natural geomagnetic field, when all other orientational cues were eliminated, results indicated significant heterogeneity of ant distribution with the majority seeking geomagnetic north in darkness. However, in light, foragers failed to discriminate geomag… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…This also made the ants positively phototactic. Because ants are known to obtain directional information from magnetic field lines (Camlitepe and Stradling, 1995;Camlitepe et al, 2005;Riveros and Srygley, 2008) and idiothetic cues (Cosens and Toussaint, 1985;Aksoy and Camlitepe, 2005), monochromatic test stimuli were interchanged after every fifteenth forager. Prior to each test, food was removed and the feeding boxes were replaced with clean empty ones.…”
Section: Elimination Of Cuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This also made the ants positively phototactic. Because ants are known to obtain directional information from magnetic field lines (Camlitepe and Stradling, 1995;Camlitepe et al, 2005;Riveros and Srygley, 2008) and idiothetic cues (Cosens and Toussaint, 1985;Aksoy and Camlitepe, 2005), monochromatic test stimuli were interchanged after every fifteenth forager. Prior to each test, food was removed and the feeding boxes were replaced with clean empty ones.…”
Section: Elimination Of Cuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fruit flies learned the magnetic position of the source of light that attracted them. In spite of the fact that other diverse experimental approaches were published (AcostaAvalos et al, 2001;Banks and Srygley, 2003;Camlitepe et al, 2005;Etheredge et al, 1999;Perez et al, 1999;Srygley et al, 2006;Ugolini, 2006;Vácha and Soukopová, 2004;Zhang et A relatively simple all-laboratory behavioural assay of insect magnetoreception has been developed. We found non-conditioned reactions of American cockroach to the periodical shifts of the geomagnetic field.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The only data come from Arendse and Vrins (1975) who discovered that the magnetic reaction of Tenebrio molitor was correctly oriented in a field where the vertical component was reduced to less than 4% (only the horizontal component remained); they therefore assumed that the polarity principle-most likely magnetite-was used. Although a number of works of more recent dates give altogether a convincing evidence that insects perceive and orient themselves according to the magnetic field (Acosta-Avalos et al 2001;Banks and Srygley 2003;Camlitepe et al 2005;Etheredge et al 1999;Esquivel et al 2006;Perez et al 1999;Srygley et al 2006;Ugolini 2006), we have no certain data pointing at one or the other type of compass orientation achieved by means of the inverted inclination test.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 67%