Equatorial sandhoppers use body scans to detect the earth's magnetic field.

Journal: Journal Of Comparative Physiology. A, Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, And Behavioral Physiology
Published:
Abstract

Adults of Talorchestia martensii were individually released in a confined environment, with and without the natural magnetic field, under the sun and in a dark room. The sandhoppers scanned the horizontal component of the magnetic field by left and right oscillations of the entire major body axis. The frequency of this behaviour increased in a zeroed magnetic field, as did the frequencies of other behavioural indicators that reflect the difficulty in identifying the ecologically efficient orientation direction (sea-land axis). Therefore, like head scans in birds, body scans seem to be used by equatorial sandhoppers to detect the magnetic symmetry plane.

Authors
A Ugolini