Magnetic crystals found in the noses of salmon could aid navigation 
By Sam Jarman US Source: physicsworld 1/31/2022
Sam Jarman
Credit: Zureks/CC BY-SA 3.0
Tiny crystals of iron-based magnetite have been found in specialized receptor cells in the noses of salmon, suggesting that the crystals are used by the fish to navigate by Earth’s magnetic field. The research was done by an international team of scientists who have also discovered a possible evolutionary link between the magnetic sensory mechanisms of animals and magnetotactic bacteria, which contain tiny “compass needles”.
 

Salmon hatch in rivers, where they spend a year or so before migrating to the sea – returning as adults to their riverbed of birth to spawn. This migration can extend over thousands of kilometres and studies in which young salmon were exposed to magnetic fields suggest that the fish use an internal compass to navigate.

Some other animals also respond to magnetic fields and scientists believe that this could be related to magnetite, which is a magnetic material present in some organisms. However, a specific magnetite receptor has not been found in animals – and how animals sense Earth’s magnetic field remains a mystery.

 
Salmon, Chinook Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3476Angler shocked after filleting a cod and discovering it has BLUE fleshdailymail2017-03-07UK
3477Sir Richard Branson, Guy Harvey take in grouper spawning off Little Caymancaymancompass2017-03-14KY
3478Killing Goldfish In Tehran: Persian New Year Revives Fish Furorrferl2017-03-19IR
3479The Ingenious Ancient Technology Concealed in the Shallowshakaimagazine2021-08-03US
348019-year-old rookie fisherman catches record-breaking king salmonwfla2021-08-08US
3481Canada-U.S. study: Grass carp invade three of the Great Lakesdigitaljournal2017-01-28CA
3482Watch this invisible robot grab a fish out of the bluetheverge2017-02-01US
3483The Mystery of the 19th-Century Maine Marine Monsterhakaimagazine2017-02-06US
3484High levels of element found in coal ash detected in N.C. fish, researchers saywbtv2017-02-07US
3485Tasmanian salmon farms ‘relocated’ 700 fish-crazy sealstheaustralian2017-02-15AU
3486Mysterious oarfish sightings stoke earthquake fears in the PhilippinesRT2017-02-19PH
3487Не только стерлядь, но и щуку дети увидят только в сказкеaif2021-08-25RU
3488Giant sea bass are thriving in Mexican waters – scientific research that found them to be critically endangeredtheconversation2021-08-04US
3489What would you need to give up to save salmon in WA?crosscut2021-08-05US
3490Wicked Tuna! Massachusetts teens catch 455 pounder: ‘My first time going out there’mercury news2021-08-06US
3491River monsters: NC fishermen catch giant catfishes to break state recordswfmynews22021-08-06US
3492Fish rapidly adapt to pollution thousands of times lethal levelsnewscientist2016-12-08US
3493Southaven man gets award for world-record fishwreg2017-01-23US
3494Scientists can't decide if fish feel painbusinessinsider2017-01-18US
3495Photo of frozen fish in S.D. goes viralkotatv2017-01-16CA
3496Japan fish exorcists’ bizarre ritual hit by animal abuse claimsmalaymail2017-01-13JP
3497US salmon may carry Japanese tapewormCNNwire2017-01-14US
3498Sewage plant upgrade reverses 'feminized' male fishCBC News2017-01-13CA
3499Why the U.S. Government Treats Catfish Unlike Any Other Fishatlasobscura2017-01-13US
3500Not so cold-bloodedspectator2017-01-07JP

215 216 217 139 of [218 - pages.]