Putman Nathan F
National Marine Fisheries Service, Southeast Fisheries Science Center, 75 Virginia Beach Drive, Miami, FL 33149, USA
Integr Comp Biol. 2015 Sep;55(3):396-405. doi: 10.1093/icb/icv020. Epub 2015 Apr 16.
Migration in animals has evolved as an adaptation to environmental variability across space and through time. The availability of reliable sensory cues and guidance mechanisms used in navigating among disparate locations is an essential component of this behavior. An "inherited magnetic map" is navigational solution that has evolved in some marine animals that, without prior experience or guidance from older conspecifics, migrate to oceanic foraging grounds. Laboratory experiments demonstrate that navigationally naïve salmon encountering magnetic fields characteristic of certain regions along their migratory route will bias their swimming in a particular direction. Simulations of this behavior within realistic models of oceanic circulation suggest that such behavior is highly adaptive, making the migratory route more predictable and facilitating movement into favorable oceanic regions. Such behavior is possible due to the spatial gradients of components of the geomagnetic field (e.g., the inclination angle of field lines and the total field intensity) that provide a bicoordinate grid across much of the Earth's surface. However, this environmental feature is not static, but experiences gradual and unpredictable changes that can be substantial over successive generations. Thus, drift of the geomagnetic field, in addition to variable oceanic conditions, could play a major role in shaping the distribution of marine taxa that are dependent upon such mechanisms for migratory guidance. Several possibilities are discussed for how animals might mitigate the effects of geomagnetic drift, such as calibrating their inherited magnetic map relative to the field in which they develop. Further exploration of the dynamics of the geomagnetic field in context of animal navigation is a promising avenue for understanding the how animals deal with an ever-changing environment.
动物的迁徙已经进化成为一种对空间和时间上环境变化的适应方式。在不同地点间导航时所使用的可靠感官线索和引导机制的可用性是这种行为的一个重要组成部分。“遗传磁图”是一种导航解决方案,它在一些海洋动物中已经进化出来,这些动物在没有先前经验或年长同类的引导的情况下,会迁徙到海洋觅食地。实验室实验表明,初次进行导航的鲑鱼遇到其迁徙路线上某些区域特有的磁场时,会使它们的游动偏向特定方向。在海洋环流的真实模型中对这种行为进行模拟表明,这种行为具有高度适应性,使迁徙路线更可预测,并便于进入有利的海洋区域。由于地磁场各分量的空间梯度(例如,磁力线的倾角和总场强)在地球表面的大部分区域提供了一个双坐标网格,所以这种行为是可能的。然而,这种环境特征并非一成不变,而是经历逐渐且不可预测的变化,在连续几代中这种变化可能会很大。因此,除了海洋条件的变化外,地磁场的漂移可能在塑造依赖这种迁徙引导机制的海洋生物分类群的分布方面发挥重要作用。文中讨论了动物减轻地磁场漂移影响的几种可能性,比如相对于它们发育所处的磁场校准其遗传磁图。在地磁场动力学与动物导航相关背景下的进一步探索,是理解动物如何应对不断变化的环境的一个有前景的途径。