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Animal Navigation Group
The Animal Navigation Group (ANG) provides a focal point for members interested in animal migration, orientation and navigation within the RIN. Currently there are 267 members. The Group acts as a forum to disseminate news on animal navigation, orientation and migration through its newsletter and conferences which run on a three year cycle. The next of these conferences will be RIN 11.
The Chairman, Dr Peter Fraser, a PhD from Aberdeen University, is interested in marine animals. He was the first person to identify a sense organ linked to balance in these which responds to hydrostatic pressure allowing depth perception. Present work ranges from plotting depth and temperature ranges of sharks and working out how the pressure sensor could work at the nanometer level scale. The Secretary, Dr Theresa Burt de Perera , a PhD from Oxford University, is interested in spatial cognition in animals, particularly fish. Currently, Theresa is using the blind Mexican cave fish as a model to explore the way in which a three-dimensional map of space can be built.
Newsletters, published twice each year, are edited by Dr T Burt de Perera, Hon. Sec. Animal Navigation Group. The Spring 2008 Newsletter is the largest ever, containing 67 items. New items include Long-distance migration and marine habitation in the tropical Asian catfish Pangasius krempli, Flight speeds among bird species, a polar system of intercontinental bird migration, Emigration orientation of juvenile pond-breeding amphibians in Western Massachusetts, The sensory basis of roost-finding in a forest bat, Nyctalus noctula and First records of lesser black-backed gulls Larus fuscus crossing the Sahara non-stop. Members may access this Newsletter and previous Newsletters through the 'Resources' button at the top of this page. RIN members who wish to join the ANG and receive copies of future ANG Newsletters by electronic or snail-mail should contact the RIN Administrator.
In addition to the newsletter and the online discussion board, the ANG runs a new e-mail animal navigation forum to provide an international link between research scientists and other interested people over the whole range of research disciplines that relate to animal navigation, including orientation, migration, neurobiology, animal behaviour, sensory physiology and ecology. It was formed in 2000 and has 354 members, mostly Professors and PhD experimental biologists, drawn from 34 countries around the world. To join the new e-mail animal-forum either follow the 'Rules' or send an e-mail to pinkygrocott@btopenworld.com
The BBC is running a series entitled "World on the move". It is an attempt to track great animal migrations and invites particpation by the public. Details are at http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/worldonthemove/programmes/
Link to HighWire Press Stanford University Free Online Full-text Articles http://highwire.stanford.edu/lists/freeart.dtl/
Link to Animal Migration Group Lund University http://orn-lab.ekol.lu.se/birdmigration/index.php?cat=srch&lng=en
Link to Professor Menzel's website 'Neurobiology and the Behavior of the Honeybee http://www.neurobiologie.fu-berlin.de/menzel/publications.html
Link to Professor Kamil's 'Center for avian cognition' website http://bsweb.unl.edu/avcog/personnel/kamil.htm
Link to Monarch Butterfly website 'Monarch Watch' http://www.MonarchWatch.org
Link to Advanced Concepts Team - Biomimetics - European Space Agencyhttp://www.esa.int/gsp/ACT/bio/index.htm
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