SummaryIn the final phase of their spawning migration, Pacific salmon use chemical cues to identify their home river, but how they navigate from the open ocean to the correct coastal area has remained enigmatic [1]. To test the hypothesis that salmon imprint on the magnetic field that exists where they first enter the sea and later seek the same field upon return [2–4], we analyzed a 56-year fisheries data set on Fraser River sockeye salmon, which must detour around Vancouver Island to approach the river through either a northern or southern passageway [5, 6]. We found that the proportion of salmon using each route was predicted by geomagnetic field drift: the more the field at a passage entrance diverged from the field at the river mouth, ...
Pacific salmon are famous for their homing migration from open-ocean to their natal river to spawn. ...
SummaryHow animals navigate long distances to specific targets remains enigmatic. For Pacific salmon...
Graduation date: 2015Access restricted to the OSU Community, at author's request, from Dec. 15, 2014...
In the final phase of their spawning migration, Pacific salmon use chemical cues to identify their h...
This is the author's final peer reviewed manuscript as accepted by the publisher. The official publi...
Highlights: • Sockeye salmon use geomagnetic imprinting as a homing mechanism. • The homing route of...
Organisms use a variety of environmental cues to orient their movements in three-dimensional space. ...
Graduation date: 2015Numerous populations of salmon and trout undergo extensive migrations, migratin...
Many animals undertaking long-distance migrations use Earth’s magnetic field as a “map” to assess th...
A migration study on the homing of Atlantic salmon was carried out in waters off SW – Iceland. Data...
SummaryMigratory marine animals exploit resources in different oceanic regions at different life sta...
Organisms use a variety of environmental cues to orient their movements in three-dimensional space. ...
SummaryThe hardest working complex in animal cell division has a new gig. This extraordinary machine...
Several marine animals, including salmon and sea turtles, disperse across vast expanses of ocean bef...
<div><p>Empirical evidence exists that some marine animals perceive and orient to local distortions ...
Pacific salmon are famous for their homing migration from open-ocean to their natal river to spawn. ...
SummaryHow animals navigate long distances to specific targets remains enigmatic. For Pacific salmon...
Graduation date: 2015Access restricted to the OSU Community, at author's request, from Dec. 15, 2014...
In the final phase of their spawning migration, Pacific salmon use chemical cues to identify their h...
This is the author's final peer reviewed manuscript as accepted by the publisher. The official publi...
Highlights: • Sockeye salmon use geomagnetic imprinting as a homing mechanism. • The homing route of...
Organisms use a variety of environmental cues to orient their movements in three-dimensional space. ...
Graduation date: 2015Numerous populations of salmon and trout undergo extensive migrations, migratin...
Many animals undertaking long-distance migrations use Earth’s magnetic field as a “map” to assess th...
A migration study on the homing of Atlantic salmon was carried out in waters off SW – Iceland. Data...
SummaryMigratory marine animals exploit resources in different oceanic regions at different life sta...
Organisms use a variety of environmental cues to orient their movements in three-dimensional space. ...
SummaryThe hardest working complex in animal cell division has a new gig. This extraordinary machine...
Several marine animals, including salmon and sea turtles, disperse across vast expanses of ocean bef...
<div><p>Empirical evidence exists that some marine animals perceive and orient to local distortions ...
Pacific salmon are famous for their homing migration from open-ocean to their natal river to spawn. ...
SummaryHow animals navigate long distances to specific targets remains enigmatic. For Pacific salmon...
Graduation date: 2015Access restricted to the OSU Community, at author's request, from Dec. 15, 2014...