Unilateral hippocampal lesions and the navigational performance of homing pigeons as revealed by GPS-tracking

IF 1.1 4区 生物学 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Ethology Ecology & Evolution Pub Date : 2022-12-12 DOI:10.1080/03949370.2022.2152105
A. Gagliardo, E. Pollonara, Giovanni Casini, V. Bingman
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Abstract

The left and right hippocampal formation (HF) of the avian brain have been reported to control some different aspects of homing in pigeons. In the current study, we employed GPS-tracking technology and unilateral HF lesions to further explore what if any aspects of a pigeon’s homing flight might be under dominant control by either the left or right HF. Pigeons were released from three locations prior to any experimental manipulation and released repeatedly from the same three sites as sham-lesioned control, right HF-lesioned and left HF-lesioned treatment groups. Analyses of homing performance and virtual vanishing bearings revealed no effect of either lesion treatment. A more in-depth analysis of path efficiency during the initial decision-making, en route and near home phases of a homing flight also revealed no effect of either lesion treatment. A last analysis on the learning and memory for positions along a previously flown route, a proxy for investigating the development of route fidelity, also revealed no effect of either unilateral lesion. However, independent of treatment group, some statistically significant effects were observed with respect to changes in performance across training and the different release sites. The current study revealed no detectable difference between the left and right HF-lesioned pigeons with respect to several navigational parameters of a homing flight. Although in need of supporting experimentation, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that both the left and right HF are similarly able to support several aspects of homing pigeon navigation. HIGHLIGHTS No effect of unilateral HF-lesions on pigeons’ homing was found. Both the left and right HF support local navigation and route fidelity development.
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gps追踪对信鸽单侧海马病变与导航性能的影响
据报道,鸟类大脑的左右海马体结构(HF)控制着鸽子的一些不同方面。在当前的研究中,我们采用gps跟踪技术和单侧HF病变来进一步探索鸽子的归巢飞行的任何方面是否可能受到左HF或右HF的主导控制。在任何实验操作之前,鸽子从三个地点释放,并从相同的三个地点反复释放,作为假损伤对照组,右侧hf损伤组和左侧hf损伤组。对归巢性能和虚拟消失轴承的分析显示,两种损伤治疗都没有效果。一项更深入的路径效率分析显示,在初始决策阶段、返航途中和返航临近阶段,两种损伤治疗都没有效果。最后一项对先前飞行路线上的位置的学习和记忆的分析(研究路线保真度发展的代理)也显示单侧损伤没有影响。然而,独立于治疗组,在训练和不同释放部位的表现变化方面观察到一些统计学上显著的影响。目前的研究表明,左右手hf损伤的鸽子在归航飞行的几个导航参数方面没有明显的差异。虽然需要实验的支持,但结果与左高频和右高频相似的假设是一致的,它们能够支持信鸽导航的几个方面。没有发现单侧hf损伤对鸽子归巢的影响。左右高频都支持本地导航和航路保真度的发展。
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来源期刊
Ethology Ecology & Evolution
Ethology Ecology & Evolution 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
44
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethology Ecology & Evolution is an international peer reviewed journal which publishes original research and review articles on all aspects of animal behaviour, ecology and evolution. Articles should emphasise the significance of the research for understanding the function, ecology, evolution or genetics of behaviour. Contributions are also sought on aspects of ethology, ecology, evolution and genetics relevant to conservation. Research articles may be in the form of full length papers or short research reports. The Editor encourages the submission of short papers containing critical discussion of current issues in all the above areas. Monograph-length manuscripts on topics of major interest, as well as descriptions of new methods are welcome. A Forum, Letters to Editor and Book Reviews are also included. Special Issues are also occasionally published.
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