Study: Magnetism helps salmon find home river

GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) — Salmon have long been known to use their sense of smell to find their home river when it comes time to spawn, but how do they get close enough to smell the river?
A new study suggests that, like birds migrating over long distances, salmon use the earth's magnetic field.
The study published this week in the journal Current Biology looked at 56 years of fisheries data about which route sockeye salmon used when they returned to the Fraser River in British Columbia.
Scientists found that which way the salmon chose to go around Vancouver Island matched natural shifts in the geomagnetic field. When the magnetic field shifted to the north, the fish swam by the north shore of the island. When it shifted to the south, the fish swam by the south side.
By a smaller degree, fish tended to take the northern route when ocean surface temperatures were warmer, presumably because they were trying to stay in colder water, the study found.
"What we think happens is that when salmon leave the river system as juveniles and enter the ocean, they imprint the magnetic field — logging it in as a waypoint," which they can follow home from their travels around the Pacific Ocean, said lead author Nathan Putman, a researcher at Oregon State University. "That should get them to within (30 to 60 miles) of their own river system and then olfactory cues or some other sense kicks on."
Peter B. Moyle, professor of fisheries at the University of California at Davis, said the study was convincing' and came to a conclusion that scientists have long suspected.
Moyle noted that other fish, including Atlantic Salmon, sharks and tuna, are known to have magnetic particles in their bodies, which could figure in their ability to migrate long distances to return to a specific place. Some sharks, for instance, return to the same underwater mountains, which produce a change in the magnetic field.
"If you have the right equipment in the brain to detect these fields, it's like having your built-in GPS system," he said.
There is speculation that due to the current movement of the magnetic poles that the earth's magnetic field may soon reverse. Wonder what this will do to the species that use the field for navigation?
I have said for a long time that even people who are sensitive to the earth's magnetic fields have the ability to detect water, and that is what makes them able to douse, or "water-witch". It has nothing to do with sorcery or witchcraft.
A study that suggests that salmon use magnetism to find the stream thy spawned in, similar to how migrating birds find their way over thousands of miles.
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I don't hold a PHD but I already knew that. This study does not prove anything, nor does it accomplish anything. The faculty at public universities must publish every five years or so. What they publish is not for the likes of you or me, it is for their peers. These publishings are not written in a language used by the rest of us, it is specific to the academic club to which they belong.
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There will be a lot of high brow academia backslapping over this one even so.
Animal magnetism?
Scorpions, Great album
Ya mean like birds? Hmm.
So we should now be using magnets to catch salmon, instead of bait?
 @jpk Why not, we use magnet schools as bait in Portland :)