Trilobites, NYTimes
By KAREN WEINTRAUB APRIL 13, 2018
Loggerhead turtles are known to use the
earth’s magnetic fields to nest on Florida’s Gulf beaches within about 40 to 50
miles of where they were born decades earlier.
Credit-J. Roger Brothers/UNC-Chapel Hill
Sea turtles use the earth’s magnetic fields
to navigate back to the area where they were born decades earlier, according to
a new study that used loggerhead genetics to investigate their travels.
After swimming for years in a giant loop from
nesting grounds in North Carolina and Florida to North Africa, the turtles find
their way back to nest on beaches within about 40 to 50 miles of where they
were born. The new study suggests that the turtles learned their home beach’s
distinctive magnetic signature, through what is called geomagnetic imprinting.
“This is vital information if you want to
restore sea turtles to areas where they once lived before being hunted to
extinction,” said Kenneth Lohmann, a professor at the University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill, and senior author of the study published Thursday in Current
Biology.
He added that the same concepts may be
applicable for restoring salmon and other fish to rivers because many birds and
fish also use magnetic fields for navigation.
“That’s really cool and really impressive and
they do it traveling through the seemingly featureless open ocean,” said J.
Roger Brothers, the paper’s first author and a sea turtle expert, who is
scheduled to receive his Ph.D. from Chapel Hill next month.
The turtles can perceive both the magnetic
field’s intensity and its inclination angle, the angle that the field lines
make with respect to the Earth’s surface, earlier research has shown.
By using previously reported genetic
information from more than 800 nesting Florida loggerheads, Dr. Lohmann and Mr.
Brothers were able to show that there was more genetic similarity among turtles
that nest on beaches with similar magnetic signatures than there was among
turtles that nest on beaches that were physically close to each other.
“We expect that geographically close
locations will be genetically related, and geographically distant locations
will have distinct populations. That’s not what we see,” Mr. Brothers said.
“The variation in earth’s magnetic field around the nesting area seems to
really predict genetic differentiation much better than geographic distance.”
It’s also a better predictor than
environmental conditions like beach temperature, he said.
Loggerhead turtles are known to nest on
Florida’s Gulf as well as Atlantic coasts, with some apparently nesting on both
sides of the peninsula at different points in their life, Mr. Brothers said.
With magnetic fields running across the peninsula, individual turtles might be
making navigational errors and nesting on beaches that are magnetically similar
to their home beach, but on opposite coasts, he said.
Dr. Lohmann said that conservation efforts in
Bermuda, where there have been unsuccessful attempts to restore sea turtle
populations driven to extinction centuries ago, might benefit from considering
this geomagnetic imprinting.
Theoretically, turtles might be encouraged to
nest on certain beaches if the magnetic field of hatchlings were manipulated to
convince them that they were born in a different location.
The current study is based on genetic data,
not experimental evidence, but Dr. Lohmann said a more definitive study would
be too challenging to undertake. Sea turtles don’t begin to reproduce until
they are about 20, and only one out of 1,000 hatchlings survives to reproduce,
so scientists would need to run an unrealistically long and large experiment,
he said.
Even without being definitive, the new
research is still useful, said Nathan Putman, a senior scientist at LGL
Ecological Research Associates Inc. in Bryan, Tex., who was not involved in the
study.
“Understanding very fundamental and basic
aspects of the organism’s navigational decisions gives you a lot more
information,” he said.
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