Eric Middleton, University of Utah
Life Sciences
One of the most impressive examples of homing among birds is demonstrated by Columba livia, or the rock pigeon. In racing or carrier breeds, birds can routinely travel over 100 miles and reliably find their way back to their home loft (Pratt, 1954). Bred from feral rock pigeons, these racers and carriers have been selected for their increased ability to home. While much research has been conducted on the mechanisms of homing, the heritability of homing is not very well understood. Furthermore, it is unclear if homing is predominantly learned or innate (Melhorn, Haastert, Rehkamper, 2010). The existence of homing breeds demonstrates that homing is heritable, but the degree to which this is the case or what traits in particular are improved with selective breeding are more uncertain. To attempt to better understand the heritability of homing, we will compare the homing ability of pigeons who are siblings to each other, and to unrelated pigeons. We first captured 90 wild pigeons from areas around Salt Lake City and allowed them to breed freely. We tracked the ancestry of all of the pigeons born from the feral birds and banded each of the birds in order to reliably distinguish which birds were related. We are now in the process of teaching the captive bred birds to home. Once this is completed, we will release the birds at varying distances from the loft. To quantify homing ability, we will measure angle of displacement from the loft when the birds first orient themselves and being homing, the time it takes to home, and which birds successfully make it home to the loft. This data will then be used to compare the homing ability of siblings to unrelated pigeons.