The Dung Beetle Compass

What do a burly rower, a backstroke swimmer and a hard-working South African dung beetle all have in common? The answer is: they all benefit from moving along a straight path, and do so moving backwards. This, however, is where the similarity ends. While the rower has solved this navigational challe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology Jg. 28; H. 17; S. R993
Hauptverfasser: Dacke, Marie, Jundi, Basil El
Format: Journal Article
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: England 10.09.2018
ISSN:1879-0445, 1879-0445
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Zusammenfassung:What do a burly rower, a backstroke swimmer and a hard-working South African dung beetle all have in common? The answer is: they all benefit from moving along a straight path, and do so moving backwards. This, however, is where the similarity ends. While the rower has solved this navigational challenge by handing the task of steering to the coxswain, who faces the direction of travel, and the swimmer is guided down her lane by colourful ropes, the beetle puts its faith in the sky. From here, it utilises a larger repertoire of celestial compass cues than is known to be used by any other animal studied to date. A robust internal compass, designed to interpret directional information, has evolved under the selective pressure of shifting today's lunch efficiently out of reach of competitors, also drawn to the common buffet. While this is a goal that beetles might share with the hungry athletes, they reach it with drastically different brain powers; the brain of the beetle is several times smaller than a match head, containing fewer than a million neurons.
Bibliographie:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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ISSN:1879-0445
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2018.04.052