Homing pigeons can be taken from their lofts and transported hundreds of kilometers in covered cages to unfamiliar sites and yet, when released, be able to choose fairly accurate homeward bearings within a minute and fly home. ███
If the birds are using an internal magnetic compass to track displacement, then we would expect distorting magnetic fields to impair their ability to home but it does not reliably do so.
Mechanism ·Conscious navigation to track displacement
If the birds are tracking displacement by consciously tracking their movements (e.g., "I turned left and flew 3 minutes before diving low and then I turned right..."), then we would expect that anesthetizing them would impair their ability to home but it does not at all.
Criticism of Olfactory Hypothesis ·Pigeons cannot distinguish natural air from filtered air
If pigeons did use their sense of smell to create a map, presumably they would be able to tell natural, scent ladened air, from pure, filtered air. But they cannot.
Alternative Explanation ·for Papi's experimental results
Why did Papi's pigeons have trouble homing? It wasn't because they couldn't smell. It was because plugging their noses was a traumatic experience and interfered with their breathing.
When pigeons could not smell but could breathe comfortably, they were able to home. So the mechanism for their map sense is not olfactory.
Passage Style
Critique or debate
Phenomenon-hypothesis
18.
Information in the passage supports █████ ███ ██ ███ █████████ ██████████ █████████ ███ ██████ ████████████ ██████ ████████ ██ ███ ██████ ██████████ ███ ██████████ ███ ███████ ██ ███████ ██ ███████
Question Type
Implied
The author believes the outward displacement theory is unlikely, because experiments have shown that fake magnetic fields and impairing pigeons’ ability to track orientation while being moved do not affect their ability to home. Still, we haven’t yet done an experiment that involves both fake magnetic fields and impaired orientation at the same time, so we can’t rule out outward displacement entirely.
a
It has been ████████████ █████ ███ ██ ███ ███████ ██ ████████ ████████████
Anti-supported. The author notes at the end of P2 that we haven’t done an experiment that evaluates both displacement by magnetism and displacement by tracking orientation. So we can’t rule out the possibility that the pigeon can outwardly displace using various independent mechanisms.
The author doesn’t suggest that any results show that outward displacement theory might be correct.
e
It is not █ ██████ ██████ ███████ ██ ███ ██████████ ██ █████████ ███████████ ██ █████ ██ █████ ██ ███████
The author doesn’t suggest that the theory isn’t useful or that any lack of usefulness relates to the difficulty of experimental design.
Difficulty
87% of people who answer get this correct
This is a moderately difficult question.
It is similar in difficulty to other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%138
148
75%159
Analysis
Implied
Critique or debate
Phenomenon-hypothesis
Science
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
4%
163
b
6%
161
c
87%
169
d
1%
160
e
3%
160
Question history
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