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Detecting magnetoreceptors in marine animals: One application of magnetomotive imaging is the detection of magnetoreceptors in marine animals. Many different species of animals are able to migrate hundreds of miles and then return to their original nesting ground. These include all types of animals such as mammals (whales, elephants), birds (geese, ducks), aquatic animals (sharks, salmon), and reptiles (sea turtles, frogs). These animals use different navigation methods, and some of these methods remain a mystery to scientists. One example is magnetic homing in which certain animals, such as sea turtles, are able to navigate using the Earth’s magnetic field. Researchers (such as our collaborator Ken Lohmann in the biology department at UNC) have shown that when placed in a tank with a variable magnetic field, the sea turtles will orient themselves according to the direction of the applied field.
The magnetoreceptor hypothesis is based upon the fact that other, smaller, organisms are known to contain such iron-oxide crystals and to use them to align with the Earth’s magnetic field. Due to the size of the crystals and their magnetization, we know iron-oxide crystals to be good contrast agents for MMOCT, so we propose to use MMOCT to locate the magnetoreceptors within sea turtles. Recently, we have imaged magnetotactic bacteria that are known to contain chains of iron-oxide crystals which they use to align with Earth’s magnetic field and to swim to deeper parts of the ocean (Fig. 2).
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