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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 1999, 19(1):311-315
Homing in Pigeons: The Role of the Hippocampal Formation in the
Representation of Landmarks Used for Navigation
Anna
Gagliardo1,
Paolo
Ioalé1, and
Verner P.
Bingman2
1 Dipartimento di Etologia, Ecologia ed Evoluzione,
Universitá di Pisa, I-56126 Pisa, Italy, and
2 Department of Psychology, Bowling Green State University,
Bowling Green, Ohio 43403
When given repeated training from a location, homing pigeons
acquire the ability to use familiar landmarks to navigate home. Both
control and hippocampal-lesioned pigeons succeed in learning to use
familiar landmarks for homing. However, the landmark representations that guide navigation are strikingly different. Control and
hippocampal-lesioned pigeons were initially given repeated training
flights from two locations. On subsequent test days from the two
training locations, all pigeons were rendered anosmic to eliminate use
of their navigational map and were phase- or clock-shifted to examine
the extent to which their learned landmark representations were
dependent on the use of the sun as a compass. We show that control
pigeons acquire a landmark representation that allows them to directly use landmarks without reference to the sun to guide their flight home,
called "pilotage". Hippocampal-lesioned birds only learn to use
familiar landmarks at the training location to recall the compass
direction home, based on the sun, flown during training, called
"site-specific compass orientation." The results demonstrate that
for navigation of 20 km or more in a natural field setting, the
hippocampal formation is necessary if homing pigeons are to learn a
spatial representation based on numerous independent landmark elements
that can be used to directly guide their return home.
Key words:
cognitive map; hippocampus; homing; navigation; pigeons; spatial memory
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/191311-05$05.00/0
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