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Orientation and navigation in the rough-skinned newt, Taricha granulosa

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Title Orientation and navigation in the rough-skinned newt, Taricha granulosa
Names Darrow, Thomas D. (creator)
Storm, Robert M. (advisor)
Date Issued 1966-09-30 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1967
Abstract In the field of herpetology, most studies of homing have been
carried out with anurans and, to a lesser degree, reptiles. Studies
of orientation and navigation in urodeles have been limited to a few
brief notes and the extensive investigation of Taricha rivularis by
Twitty (1959 and 1964).
The rough-skinned newt, Taricha granulosa, is abundant and
widespread throughout western Oregon. Their regular breeding migrations
have been noted by herpetologists for years; however, it has
never been established whether or not the newt is capable of returning
to the same breeding pond annually. This investigation was started
to determine how strong an identification T. granulosa has with a
particular breeding pond and what mechanisms might aid it in returning
to that pond. Prior research on sensory mechanisms utilized by
T. rivularis during its breeding migrations indicated that olfaction
was of prime importance to that newt.
Between June, 1964 and June, 1966, 4, 577 newts were marked
and released at three ponds 11-31 miles apart. Newts exchanged between
ponds were blinded, had the olfactory nerves destroyed or
were marked and released unharmed as controls. A portion of the
newts were released at distances of 100 yards, mile and 1/4 mile
from their individual home ponds. Drift fences with funnel traps or
drop traps were placed near each pond to intercept homing newts.
Only controls were recaptured returning to the home pond during
this study. Percentages of returns ranged from 0.7 percent for
animals displaced 31 miles to 23.8 percent for those released 1/2 mile
from the home pond. The time required to travel a known distance
varied from 1/2 mile in five days to 3 1/2 miles in 485 days.
A second phase of the study consisted of testing the orientation
ability of newts placed in an enclosure wherein only solar or celestial
clues were available to them. During 41 separate daylight trials,
1,047 newts were tested. A total of 155 newts were tested during
five night trials. Scatter diagrams showed that, during daylight
hours, initial headings in the orientation ring were correlated with
the general bearing that newts were following when captured at the
drift fences (Y-axis orientation). Chi-square tests applied to totals
of animals trapped at 16 points around the ring's circumference indicated
a probability of less than .02 that newts had made a random
choice of direction when released during daylight. Distribution diagrams and chi-square tests of night runs indicated a random
distribution in the orientation ring during darkness. A limited
sample size made the significance of night tests questionable.
Newts returned from distances of up to 3 1/2 miles and were
able to orient in an enclosure which was far removed from the influence
of any odors emanating from their home pond. Indications
are that vision as well as odor may play a significant role in navigation
of this species during its breeding migrations.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Newts
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/47408

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