Shropshire Star

Could a sea bird’s sense of smell be key to navigating the oceans?

New research from Oxford University thinks so.

Published
The experiment tested Scopoli’s shearwaters (Ryan Fletcher/Getty Images)

Sea birds’ sense of smell is a key factor in how they navigate the oceans, scientists at Oxford University have found.

They believe an experiment on shearwaters in the Mediterranean answers the complex question which zoologists have debated for decades, with arguments over whether they relied on the Earth’s magnetic field or their olfaction when flying long distances over featureless water.

Researchers tracked 32 free-ranging Scopoli’s shearwaters off the coast of Menorca, which were split into three groups.

Shearwater Sea Bird flying. (Ryan Fletcher/Getty Images)
(Ryan Fletcher/Getty Images)

Miniature GPS loggers were attached to the birds as they nested and incubated eggs in crevices and caves on the rocky Menorcan coast. They were then tracked as they foraged at sea.

All of them flew out to forage, gained weight and incubated eggs, but the birds with the affected sense of smell made poorly-orientated flights home when they were out of sight of land.

Shearwater bird. (Ryan Fletcher/Getty Images)
(Ryan Fletcher/Getty Images)

The research, by the universities of Oxford, Barcelona and Pisa, is published in the journal Scientific Reports.

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