logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
              
logo 11/27/2024 12:50:15 AM     
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
2276Northern Pike Attacks Huskyfishncanada2022-11-10CA
2277Seeking to optimise RAS-grown salmon productionThe Fish Site2022-12-29US
2278US Gets 1 Bid for Oil and Gas Lease in Alaska's Cook Inletusnews2022-12-30US
2279Первые поклевки со льдаОхотники.ру2022-12-24RU
2280Blood-sucking fish in its own leagueodt2022-12-12NZ
2281Old Mini Cooper transformed for fish to swim with rocks and plantsindianexpress2022-12-14IN
2282Illegal fish stocking at Virginia reservoir raises concerns about impact on native specieswavy2022-12-16US
2283Scientists finds stem cell network in ancient fishmirage news2022-12-13US
2284Red tide results in 1,700 pounds of dead fish along St. Pete Beachmysuncoast2022-12-13US
2285'Collective grief' hits Atlantic Canada after loss of Nova Scotia fishermanmsn2022-12-28CA
2286Pink salmon earns Fish of the Yearchicago suntimes2022-12-28US
2287Поиск рыбца в горной рекеОхотники.ру2022-12-23RU
2288A fish that's swum in Maine ponds since the Ice Age faces an uncertain futureConnecticut Public Radio / WNPR2022-12-12US
2289Maine gets federal money to improve migratory fish passage, habitatmaine public2022-12-15US
2290Suit targets Washington fish farming ban, seeks stay for 300,000 troutwashington examiner2022-12-17US
2291Fish see in the dark thanks to extra layers of rod cells in their eyesnewscientist2022-12-21US
2292Protecting Westslope Cutthroat with a new fish barriersuncruisermedia2015-12-19CA
2293EIB invests £42 million in Swedish land-based salmon farmThe Fish Site2022-12-26SW
2294After report on toxic salmon in Columbia River, Northwest lawmakers call for actionopb2022-12-14US
229536 fish passage projects slated by federal government, including 4 in New EnglandFox News2022-12-16US
2296These plant, fish and bird species all have something in commoncbc2022-12-23CA
2297‘A soul wound’: a First Nation built its culture around salmontheguardian2022-12-05UK
2298Record-breaking bony fish weighing 3 tons found in Portugalmsn2022-10-19PT
2299Volunteers try to save trapped fish in Italyyahoo2022-11-16IT
2300Chinese researchers identify gene that makes algae an ideal aquaculture and biofuel candidateThe Fish Site2022-12-21CN

134 135 136 91 of [137 - pages.]