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Moths use stars and Earth’s magnetic field as a compass

Close-up of a Bogong moth
Photo: Ajay Narendra

A groundbreaking study from Lund University in Sweden shows that the Australian Bogong moth uses the stars and the Milky Way as a compass during its annual 1,000-kilometre journey to cool inland caves. It also reveals that the Earth’s magnetic field plays an important role in the enigmatic moth’s navigation.

It is absolutely amazing considering the length of the journey. It’s the equivalent of a human migrating the length of two round-the-world journeys using only their senses
 

The Bogong moth Agrotis infusa is native to Australia and has an unassuming grey-brown colour and a brain the size of a tenth of a grain of rice. Despite this, it also has a hidden “sixth sense” that has puzzled scientists for decades. 

Every summer, it makes a night-time journey of more than 1,000 kilometres in the dark. It then spends the summer in the cool caves of Australia’s highest mountain range, the Snowy Mountains – a place the moths manage to find despite never having been there before or having any type of guide. When autumn arrives, the approximately four billion moths make the same journey back again to mate, lay eggs and ultimately die.

Research team walking in terrain in Australia
On the Way to Bogong Cave at South Ramshead

In a new study published in Nature, an international team of researchers led by Lund University in Sweden has managed to identify part of the puzzle surrounding the migration mystery.

“Navigating by the stars is a capacity that only humans, often with the help of a sextant, and certain birds that migrate at night possess. Now we can establish that the Bogong moth is the first invertebrate so far known to master this feat,” says Eric Warrant, a biology professor at Lund University who led the study.



It is of the utmost importance that we protect this marvellous navigator and provide it with safe migration routes and dark skies


A eureka moment

Using sophisticated flight simulators and brain analyses in controlled, magnetically neutral environments in Australia, the researchers tested how the moths orientate themselves under different sky conditions. When the insects were presented with a natural starry sky without a magnetic field, they consistently flew in the right migratory direction for the season – south in spring, north in autumn.

“When the starry sky was rotated 180 degrees, the moths also changed direction 180 degrees, but when the stars were distorted, their orientation disappeared. It was a real eureka moment to experience this in the experiments,” says David Dreyer, a researcher at Lund University.

Close-up of a Bogong moth
Photo: Ajay Narendra


The researchers also succeeded in mapping the neural circuits in the moths’ mini-brains where information about the stars is stored. And not only that – they were also able to establish that the Bogong moth does not lose its migratory direction when the stars are covered by clouds. This means that the Earth’s magnetic field can also be used as a supplementary compass.

“It is absolutely amazing considering the length of the journey. It’s the equivalent of a human migrating the length of two round-the-world journeys using only their senses,” says Eric Warrant.

The new discovery could be of interest to engineers developing flying drones, for example. It could also inform conservation strategies for species threatened by climate change or loss of habitat. Most importantly, the study highlights the magnificence of nature and the importance of preserving biodiversity.

“The Bogong moth is an endangered species in Australia due to drought caused by climate change. It is of the utmost importance that we protect this marvellous navigator and provide it with safe migration routes and dark skies,” concludes Eric Warrant.
 

Contact:

Eric Warrant


Eric Warrant, professor
Department of Biology, Lund University
+46 46 222 93 41
+46 46 70 496 49 27
eric [dot] warrant [at] biol [dot] lu [dot] se (eric[dot]warrant[at]biol[dot]lu[dot]se)

David Dreyer


David Dreyer
Researcher
Department of Biology, Lund University
david [dot] dreyer [at] biol [dot] lu [dot] se