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Navigation in Animals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 1969

G. V. T. Matthews
Affiliation:
(The Wildfowl Trust)

Extract

The last twenty-one years have seen some very striking advances in our knowledge of how animals can determine their location. In many cases we have learned that they have available a wider range of stimuli than ourselves for recognizing landmarks and for pilotage within their home area. Thus the associated senses of smell and taste are extraordinarily well developed in some species. The ability of the males of certain moths to detect the scent emitted by females at very considerable distances had long been known. More recently the extreme sensitivity, and selectivity, of fish to waterborne odours has led to an understanding of how they locate their home waters.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1969

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References

FURTHER READING

Aschoff, J. (Ed.) (1965). Circadian Clocks, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Bünning, E. (1967). The Physiological Clock, 2nd edition (revised), Berlin.Google Scholar
Eastwood, E. (1967). Radar Ornithology, London.Google Scholar
Frisch, K. v. (1968). The Dances, Language and Orientation of Bees, Oxford.Google Scholar
Griffin, D. R. (1958). Listening in the Dark, New Haven.Google Scholar
Harden Jones, F. R. (1968). Fish Migration, London.Google Scholar
Hasler, A. D. (1966). Underwater Guideposts, Madison.Google Scholar
Matthews, G. V. T. (1968). Bird Navigation, 2nd edition, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Storm, R. M. (Ed.) (1967). Animal Orientation and Navigation, Corvallis.Google Scholar
Williams, C. B. (1958). Insect Migration, London.Google Scholar