DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Scientists May Have Finally Figured Out How Pigeons Are So Good at Directions

June 6, 2026
in News
Scientists May Have Finally Figured Out How Pigeons Are So Good at Directions

Humans have been using pigeons to send messages across long distances for thousands of years, thanks to their remarkable sense of direction. According to new research published in the journal Science, we may have been looking for the source of that ability in the wrong organ. There was a simple logic to scientists assuming the answer had something to do with their brains or eyes or even their inner ears. The answer was much lower: their liver.

It all has to do with how pigeons, or any animal really, detect the Earth’s magnetic field. The leading theories were all based on the idea that they “see” magnetic fields with some kind of light-sensitive molecules in their eyes, or maybe they detect them using magnetic particles and their beaks. All very fanciful, almost magical explanations, none of which ever explained the mystery.

Now, a team of researchers from Germany’s Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior and the University of Bonn, among others, started to look elsewhere around birds’ bodies for evidence of magnetic activity. They wound up finding the strongest magnetic signal coming from the liver.

Is a Pigeon’s Internal Compass in Its Liver?

It sounds ridiculous, but it might all be thanks to something called macrophages, immune cells that break down old red blood cells and hold on to iron. Researchers found that these cells, rich in iron, are highly responsive to magnetic fields. So, when the researchers temporarily removed macrophages from trained homing pigeons, the birds had no idea how to navigate anymore on overcast days. When the sun was visible, they could still find their way home using the position of the sun, indicating that it’s not solely a liver-based ability.

All this suggests that the liver cells might function as a kind of internal organic compass. When viewed under an electron microscope, images revealed the macrophages sitting right alongside nerve fibers, potentially providing a pathway for magnetic information to reach the brain.

The researchers caution that none of this means they found a definitive answer to the question of how pigeons are such expert navigators, and it still may be the case that they rely on several navigation systems at once, as their ability to navigate using the position of the sun when macrophages were removed seems to indicate.

Regardless, it’s a remarkable ability that we’ve been taking advantage of for centuries, yet we’re only just beginning to understand.

The post Scientists May Have Finally Figured Out How Pigeons Are So Good at Directions appeared first on VICE.

Scientists Think They’ve Solved a Long-Standing Mystery Around Nicotine
News

Scientists Think They’ve Solved a Long-Standing Mystery Around Nicotine

by VICE
June 6, 2026

The more you learn about the world of scientific research, the more you begin to understand how many seemingly basic ...

Read more
News

I flew on a startup’s one-of-a-kind electric plane that could reshape air travel by 2027

June 6, 2026
News

Carnival Cruise Line’s bikini crackdown could surprise passengers at island ports

June 6, 2026
News

The new millennial flex: spending thousands on a birthday weekend at a chateau

June 6, 2026
News

A CEO denied raises to spend money on AI instead. Companies have ‘no idea what they’re going to need in a workforce’ when the AI race is over

June 6, 2026
Scientists May Have Finally Figured Out How Pigeons Are So Good at Directions

Scientists May Have Finally Figured Out How Pigeons Are So Good at Directions

June 6, 2026
SpaceX needs to grow 60x in a decade to justify a $1.75 trillion valuation. No company has ever come close

SpaceX needs to grow 60x in a decade to justify a $1.75 trillion valuation. No company has ever come close

June 6, 2026
Passenger allegedly boards United Airlines flight with fake boarding pass, forcing plane back to gate

Passenger allegedly boards United Airlines flight with fake boarding pass, forcing plane back to gate

June 6, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026