Abstract

Celestial light cues visible at sunset appear to play an important role in the nocturnal orientation of several species of night-migrating birds. The pattern of skylight polarization, an especially prominent geographical reference at sunrise and sunset, influences the orientation behaviour of migratory birds. Yellow-rumped warblers were capable of seasonally appropriate cage orientation at dusk and were sensitive to manipulation of the axis of skylight polarization (E-vector). A series of experimental treatments was designed to examine the relationship between sunset position and skylight polarization. The window panels of hexagonal enclosures were fitted with a depolarizer and a polaroid filter to rotate the E-vector, and mirrors to reflect the position of sunset. The results indicate that this migrant minimizes sunset position as an orientation relative to skylight polarization and may depend upon the latter to orient at dusk. The possibility that yellow-rumped warblers calibrate their sun compass in relation to polarized light remains a question for future research.

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