How Do Pigeons Find Their Way Home?

Unlocking the secret of how birds navigate.

The pigeon is far more mysterious than meets the eye. Considered a nuisance by many, these birds are the stars of ongoing research into birds鈥 sixth sense: navigation.

From the ancient Romans to the Allied forces in World War II, humans have long used pigeons to carry messages because of their remarkable ability to find their way home. Pigeons and many other migratory birds are thought to use the earth鈥檚 magnetic fields to stay the course, but scientists aren鈥檛 sure how our feathered friends detect and process magnetic information. New research is answering some of these questions.

In May scientists reported that brainstem cells associated with the inner ear are activated when a pigeon is exposed to magnetic fields. 鈥淭he brain cells signal the direction, intensity, and polarity of the earth鈥檚 magnetic field,鈥 says J. David Dickman, a neuroscientist at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, who lead the research, published in Science. 鈥淭hese signals could be used like a GPS.鈥

Other creatures have internal compasses鈥攖rout detect magnetic information through their nose, and migrating loggerhead turtles pick up on both latitude and longitude鈥攂ut most navigation research has focused on birds.

Until recently, scientists thought that iron-rich neurons in pigeons鈥 beaks transmitted information about magnetic fields to their brains. But another team unexpectedly disproved this theory in April. The researchers discovered that the iron-rich beak cells aren鈥檛 neurons at all but actually macrophages, or white blood cells that help the bird鈥檚 immune system. They鈥檙e loaded with iron because they recycle old red blood cells, says David Keays, lead researcher and a neuroscientist at the Institute of Molecular Pathology in Vienna, Austria. 鈥淲e found them all over the bird, from the skull to the wings,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e on patrol for pathogens.鈥

The discovery means that scientists must continue the search for the magnetic field鈥搒ensing cells. But they aren鈥檛 flying blind: Dickman鈥檚 work hints that those just might be found in the inner ear.