Pigeons are always looking ahead yod67/Alamy
51动漫s have tracked the eye movements of a bird in flight for the first time, revealing that pigeons in the air lock their eyes in place rather than looking around. The behaviour may help them control their flight, but it could also leave them more vulnerable to predators.
If animals on the ground want to look at something, they move their head or eyes to fix their gaze on it, then use rapid and sometimes wide-ranging movements of the pupil, known as saccades, to give a stable view of the object relative to its surroundings. But no one really knows what happens when birds are flying.
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To find out, at the California Institute of Technology and his colleagues designed a lightweight rig of mirrors and cameras that can be attached to the head of a common pigeon (Columba livia) as it flies, as well as a small backpack that houses a camera control board and battery.
A pigeon fitted with eye-tracking equipment Andrew Biewener
They then trained six pigeons to fly between two perches about 20 metres apart indoors, and three to fly some 25 metres outdoors to return to a coop.
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During test flights in both environments, the head-mounted eye-tracking system revealed that after take-off, the birds increased their pupil size and adopted a fixed and consistent eye position in their heads, essentially locking their eyes in place.
鈥淲henever they start flying, the eyes rotate forward on average,鈥 says Ros.
If their heads moved, their eyes moved in synchrony with them. The fixed eye position aligns with the primary horizontal axis of the birds鈥 vision and their vestibular system 鈥 the sensory network that controls balance and spatial orientation.
鈥淧igeons have been shown capable of moving their eyes independently and that they can be moved by a maximum amplitude of about 15 degrees,鈥 says at the University of Birmingham, UK. 鈥淭herefore, to show that, during flight, eye movements are less than 1 degree does suggest that the birds are actively stabilising the position of their eyes when in flight.鈥
Why they are locking their eyes isn鈥檛 certain, says Ros. He thinks the alignment with the vestibular system suggests the behaviour may help pigeons distinguish their own motion from external motion 鈥 such as the movement of a tree鈥檚 branches, or a car or predator 鈥 to help them balance and navigate.
It’s also possible that reducing eye movements minimises the computational load on the brain. 鈥淭he world during flight moves a lot faster than it does during non-flight,鈥 he says.
Eye movements give pigeons a , but Ros says locking their eyes into a forward-facing position is likely to reduce this, leaving a larger blind spot behind them where they couldn鈥檛 see predators.
He is curious about what pigeon eyes would do in other situations, because all the tests were done when the birds were low to the ground. 鈥淚t might be different if pigeons were flying higher up, where there aren鈥檛 lots of objects rushing past,鈥 says Ros. He also wonders what would happen when pigeons fly in flocks. 鈥淲ould they look at other pigeons? At predators? Or at something on the horizon?鈥
Martin thinks other birds might also stabilise their eye position during flight, including predators. When in pursuit of prey, , he says. 鈥淭his presumably would require the peregrine to fix the position of their eyes rather than move them about.鈥
Journal reference:
Current Biology,
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