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The Homing Instinct: Meaning and Mystery in Animal Migration Epub Free

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Sunday, September 8, 2013

The Homing Instinct: Meaning and Mystery in Animal Migration Hardcover

Author: Visit Amazon's Bernd Heinrich Page | Language: English | ISBN: 0547198485 | Format: PDF, EPUB

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The Homing Instinct: Meaning and Mystery in Animal Migration Epub Free
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About the Author

Bernd Heinrich is an acclaimed scientist and author of numerous books, including the best-selling Winter World, Mind of the Raven, and Why We Run. He writes for Scientific American, Outside, American Scientist, and Audubon, and has published book reviews and op-eds for the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times. Among Heinrich's many honors is the 2013 PEN New England Award for Nonfiction, for Life Everlasting.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Introduction

Our passionate preoccupation with the sky, the stars, and a God somewhere in outer space is a homing impulse.
We are drawn to where we came from.
—Eric Hoffer

With all things and in all things, we are relatives.
—Native American (Sioux) proverb

I leaned on the ship’s railing at the stern, a ten-year-old boy with virtually no notion of where my family might be going. I heard the deep roar of the engines, the whine of the wind, and the rush of the churning water. I felt adrift, as though carried along like a leaf in a storm, feeling the rocking, the spray, and the endlessness and power of the waves. I had no notion that we were among multitudes who had made hard decisions to court the great unknown, or any clear idea of why my family had left the only home I’d known in a forest in Germany. The only picture of what our new home might be was that we might find magical hummingbirds, and fierce native tribes armed with knives, bows and arrows, spears, and tomahawks.
   Security for me was the memory of where we had come from, specifically a little cabin in the woods and a cozy arbor of green leaves that enclosed me like a cocoon where I could see out but nobody could see in. It meant a feeling of kinship with the tiny brown wren with an upright stubby tail that sang so exuberantly near its snug feather-lined nest of green moss hidden under the upturned roots of a tree in a dark forest. I had in idle moments in my mind inhabited that nest. I found too the nest of an equally tiny long-tailed tit. This little bird’s home was almost invisible to the eye because it was camouflaged with lichens that matched those on the thick fork of a tall alder tree where it was placed.
   The ocean all around was a spooky void. But then, after several days at sea, a huge white bird with a black back appeared as if out of nowhere, and it followed us closely. I saw its dark expressionless eyes scanning us. It was an albatross. It skimmed close over the waves and sometimes lifted above them, circled back, and then picked up momentum to again skim alongside our boat. It followed us for hours, maybe even days.
   The albatross was big and flew without beating its wings. Years later I wondered if, even in the featureless open ocean where so much looked the same every hour and every day, it may have known where it was all along. How do we find our home and recognize it when we find it? These questions were inchoate then, but given the examples of other animals, they put many ideas of home and homing in context.
   Later, as a graduate student, I read that pigeons could return home to their loft even when released in unfamiliar territory, and that some other birds could navigate continental distances using the sun and the stars. There were few answers to how they did it. But I read about researchers at Cornell University who attached magnets to the heads of pigeons and got them all confused. Donald Griffin, my scientific hero (who had discovered how bats can snatch silent moths out of the air in a totally dark room that had wires strung all over the place), was releasing seagulls over forest where they could never have been before and then tracking the birds’ flight paths, by following them in an airplane. Most of his birds turned in circles before some of them flew straight, although why was not clear. Searching for a thesis problem to work on, I wrote to ask him if birds passing through clouds might keep in a straight line by listening to the calls flocks make while migrating. He replied in a long, thoughtful letter to let me know that this idea was too simplistic, and that one should not discount much more complicated mechanisms. That was excellent advice. I did not then have the means to solve any of these puzzles, but over the years I have kept in touch with the evolving field of animal navigation and its relevance to the need for a home.

For other animals and for us, home is a “nest” where we live, where our young are reared. It is also the surrounding territory that supports us. “Homing” is migrating to and identifying a suitable area for living and reproducing and making it fit our needs, and the orienting and ability to return to our own good place if we are displaced from it. Homing is highly specific for each species, yet similarly relevant to most animals. And the exceptions are illuminated by the rule.
   The image of that albatross took on more meaning decades later, after I learned that the species mates for life and returns to the same pinpoint of its home, on some island shore where it was born, perhaps fifteen hundred kilometers distant. During the years when it grows to adulthood it may never be in sight of land. Seven to ten years after having left its home, it returns there to nest. It chooses to go there because of its bond. When a pair eventually have a chick in a nest of their own, each parent may travel over fifteen hundred kilometers of ocean to find a single big meal of squid, and after gathering up a full crop, it then flies home in a direct line; it knows where it is at all times.

The broad topic of homing subsumes many biological disciplines. In order to show the connections among all animals and us, I have interpreted the traditional use of an animal’s “territory,” or “home territory,” simply as “home.” We think of “home” primarily as a dwelling, but in order to be inclusive with other animals, I here consider their dwellings to be their homes as well. My application of the same terms to different species is deliberate for the sake of scientific rigor and objectivity, to acknowledge the continuity between our lives and those of the rest of life. I realize that this smacks to some of anthropomorphism, a pejorative term that has been used for the purpose of separating us from the rest of life. The behaviors involved in homing include drives, emotions, and to some extent also reason.
   A home makes many animals’ lives possible: home is life-giving and sought after with a passion to have and hold. We humans are not thinking much about “home” for animals when we confine them in cages devoid of almost everything they need except air, food, and water in a dispenser, or when we destroy the habitat that contains the essentials of home for many species. So I begin our exploration of home and its implications with the example of the common loons, Gavia immer, birds that may live for decades. The collaborative study by three biologists, Walter Piper, Jay Mager, and Charles Walcott, reveals how important home can be—enough for fights to the death.
   Loons spend winters in the open ocean, but a pair migrate from it and across the land back to their home, a specific northern pond or lake, to nest along its shore in the spring and raise one or two chicks out on the water. Starting almost immediately after ice-out and almost until freeze-up, camp owners along a lake routinely see “their” pair of loons year after year. It had long been assumed that the same individuals return each year and live as monogamous pairs on their strongly defended home territory. Huge surprises were in store after 1992, when techniques (using a boat, a strong light, and a net) were developed to capture loons and mark them with colored leg bands to identify individuals. In a long-term study of a population of loons in Wisconsin in a cluster of about a hundred lakes, it turned out that a pair of loons indeed returned year after year to their home. However, they were not always the same birds. As expected, given their longevity and reproductive potential, there were many “floaters,” those still without a home, and some of them routinely replaced members of a pair.
   The floaters regularly visited different pairs at home at their respective lakes, and spirited vocal meetings resulted. These seldom led to fights, but they were not just friendly visits. These floaters were at first thought to invade others’ home grounds in order to make “extra-pair parenting” attempts (which in males refers to extra-pair copulations and in females to egg dumping into the others’ nests). However, DNA fingerprinting of the young loons from four dozen families produced not a single incident of extra-pair parenting. Instead, the visits by floaters were of an entirely different nature. They had an almost literally “deadly” purpose. The floaters were scouting—making assessments of both the worthiness of the others’ real estate and the defensive capabilities of the resident males—to gauge the possibility for future takeovers.


Direct download links available for The Homing Instinct: Meaning and Mystery in Animal Migration Hardcover Epub Free
  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (April 8, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0547198485
  • ISBN-13: 978-0547198484
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 6 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Has Bernd Heinrich ever written a bad book? Not to my knowledge. From his first, groundbreaking, study of temperature control in bumblebees, Bumblebee Economics his studies of raven behavior (Ravens in Winter, 1991; Mind of the Raven: Investigations and Adventures with Wolf-Birds, 2007) on why solitary birds share their food with other solitary birds, to his lovely autobiography cum biography of his father, The Snoring Bird: My Family’s Journey through a Century of Biology (2007), everything he writes has been enriched by his blend of scientific rigor and poetic description. (The books I haven’t read show how wide-ranging his biological interests run: he’s written on how animals prepare to die, running and evolution, the trees in his woods, the wildlife year round in his Maine woods, bird nesting and “the invention of monogamy”, geese, an owl, and insect physiology and behavior in general.

Now he tackles homing: animal migration, nesting and nest-building, and in the process, talks about his own ‘home’, which is more the forest surrounding his cabin in Maine than the house itself. He is generous in recognizing and commenting on other scientists. The results of their work, in lab and in the wild, permit him to generalize beyond his own experience, which he relates lovingly. It is the combination of the analytical with the loving and accepting observer of animal ways that makes Heinrich such a good guide.
What is "home"? How and why are animals drawn toward it? That's the topic of Bernd Heinrich's new book. Thanks to the title and to the dust jacket illustration, we initially think here of the act of migration, and especially of the most noticeable ones: of large groups of birds flying overhead in the spring and the fall. But Heinrich gives us additional examples of homing in species of insects, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals; from his own observations and from the research of others. The animals may be led by instinct, sight, or a combination of reading the landscape and responding to magnetic earth forces. The choice depends on species, location, and opportunity. It's interesting stuff. The topic of homing is a much richer one than it may appear at first thought.

Then: What comes after the creature finds its best territory? Home building and home maintenance, of course. And we learn more fascinating details about the kind of structures that animals create, if they feel the need to build them. Now Heinrich turns his sights toward humans. (And we knew that he would get to this eventually, after we read the Preface.) We follow him to Maine, to his own most familiar places. Here he gives us further fodder for consideration, especially in debating why humans developed into home-builders at all. I wish he had reached this connection a bit sooner, though. And he doesn't quite resolve the personal conflict that he references in the Preface. Still, I do appreciate his final, environmentally savvy, conclusion.

Animal lovers should be forewarned or reminded that Bernd Heinrich IS a scientist. He "collects" animals for study, hunts for deer, and has no qualms about sacrificing bumble bees to orb spider webs.

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