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Migratory moths that hitch rides on wind are not drifters

Washington, Tue, 14 Oct 2008 ANI

Washington, October 14 (ANI): While migratory moths are known to hitch rides on the wind, a new study suggests that it would be wrong to brand them drifters.

 

Studies conducted in the past had shown that Silver Y moths rely on a sophisticated internal compass, sailing on favourable winds to reach their southerly winter destination within a matter of days.

 

The latest study has shown that the moths get back north, where they started from, in the spring by throwing that whole system in reverse.

 

"In our first paper, we demonstrated how the moths manage to make return migrations of hundreds of kilometers in just a few nights to their more southerly over-wintering ranges, using a compass and an inherited preferred direction," said Jason Chapman of Rothamsted Research in the United Kingdom.

 

"The obvious question arising from that study was: do the migrants also have specialized behaviors to enable them to carry out the spring northwards migrations, or do they just drift with the wind?" the researcher added.

 

During the study, the researchers examined the high-altitude spring migrations of the Silver Y moths into southern U.K. by using vertical-looking radars.

 

Over three years, in June, when the moth migrations are most frequent, they identified 83 high-altitude mass migration "events" 200 to 1,200 meters into the sky.

 

The team observed that the migrant Silver Y moths in spring limited their high-altitude travel to nights with favourable, northward winds, just as they did with the southward winds as winter approaches.

 

The researchers carefully selected their altitude to travel in the fastest winds, and align themselves such that their own flight speed adds to the wind speed.

 

The moths also reverse their preferred direction, using their internal compass to make up for any wind drift that sends them off their course north.

 

Chapman said that it was yet to be discovered exactly how the moths do so, but the team suspected that the seasonal compass switch is controlled by changes in day length over the course of the year.

 

He calls the two studies a "big advance in the field of insect migration," noting that there had been no conclusive evidence for a compass sense in nocturnal moths used to guide their migrations.

 

He highlighted the fact that a similar mechanism had been discovered in butterflies that fly low to the ground during the day, but "it is much harder to envisage how these insects are able to carry out these feats of orientation while traveling hundreds of meters above the ground at speeds up to 100 kilometers per hour in almost total darkness." (ANI)

 


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