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Geomagnetic Field Effects on Living Systems
Keller et al. (2021) further showed that the use of a magnetic map to derive positional information may
help explain aspects of the genetic structure of bonnethead populations in the northwest Atlantic and
this ability may contribute to population-level processes (Escatel-Luna et al., 2015; Fields et al., 2016;
Gonzalez et al., 2019; Díaz-Jaimes et al., 2020). Tere is other information useful for movements, such as
ocean currents and tides, but Keller et al. (2021) insisted that the MF is more stable than other informa
tion, so it is likely to be more useful for navigation. Tese fndings complement recent research that has
shown elasmobranchs likely have a polarity compass (Newton and Kajiura, 2020a). Te combination of
magnetic map and compass senses would likely be highly adaptive and allow the evolution of complex
movement patterns that are a hallmark of elasmobranch life histories (Keller et al., 2021). Teir results
are signifcant because for 50 years researchers have highlighted the importance of determining whether
sharks and rays use the GMF to aid in orientation and navigation. Multiple species of elasmobranchs
have been shown capable of detecting various components of the MF (Kalmijn, 1981, 1982; Molteno and
Kennedy, 2009; Anderson et al., 2017; Newton and Kajiura, 2017, 2020a), and this research provides eco
logic context for how these abilities may be used (Keller et al., 2021).
Recently, in the case of the birds, Nimpf et al. (2019) suggested that a putative mechanism of mag
netoreception by EM induction in the pigeon inner ear. Nimpf et al. (2019) reported the presence of a
splice isoform of a voltage-gated calcium channel (CaV1.3) in the pigeon inner ear that has been shown
to mediate electroreception in skates and sharks (Bellono et al., 2018). Nimpf et al. (2019) proposed that
pigeons detect MFs by EM induction within the semicircular canals that are dependent on the presence
of apically located voltage-gated cation channels in a population of electrosensory hair cells.
It is suggested that the ampullae of Lorenzini in shark and highly sensitive electrosensory system to
detect MF-induced EFs may not be the sole sensory receptor structures used to perceive MF stimuli, and
that an EM induction-based magnetoreceptor structure capable of perceiving changes in MF intensity
may be located in the nasal olfactory capsules of sharks as putative magnetoreceptor structures (Anderson
et al., 2017). Tese elasmobranchs are one of the more electrosensitive species, and generally, they are pri
marily responsive to both DC and AC low-intensity EFs between 0.02 and 100 μV/cm and frequencies of
0–15 Hz (Sisneros and Tricas, 2002; Bedore and Kajiura, 2013). Anderson et al. (2017) behaviorally con
ditioned sandbar sharks (Carcharhinus plumbeus) to respond to weak magnetic stimuli (> 0.03 μT) that
generated electrical artifacts of 73 nV/cm. Moreover, sharks and stingrays are well known for their sensi
tivity to EM felds (EMFs) themselves (Kalmijn, 1981, 1982; Newton and Kajiura 2017, 2020a,b; Anderson
et al., 2017). Terefore, as a future study, Newton and Kajiura (2020b) proposed that if chondrichthyans
do use their electroreceptors to detect, encode, and perceive magnetic stimuli, the next step is to uncover
how these fshes might distinguish between natural geomagnetic and bioelectric cues.
As a research experiment conducted to examine the efect on the MF generated by the high-voltage
transmission line, the conclusion that the efect could not be detected has been reported. One example is
a preliminary study of a project of hydrokinetic (HK) technologies that use the rapids of the Mississippi
River to generate 8,000 MW of electricity, led by the US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Cada
et al., 2011, 2012). Laboratory experiments conducted in the fscal year 2010 found no evidence that three
common freshwater taxa, i.e., the snail (Elimia clavaeformis), the clam (Corbicula fuminea), and the
fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) were either attracted to or repelled by an SMF (~36 mT at the
strongest point) (Cada et al., 2011). Similarly, further experiments in the fscal year 2011 with juvenile
sunfsh (Lepomis spp.), channel catfsh (Ictalurus punctatus), and striped bass (Morone saxatilis) did not
detect a signifcant change in position relative to controls (Cada et al., 2012). Tese results suggested that
the predicted 60 Hz EMF (~166 mT at the strongest point) that may be created by a single submerged
DC transmission cable from a hydrokinetic project would not seriously afect the behavior of common
freshwater species (Cada et al., 2012). Te variable EMF associated with AC currents caused little or
no behavioral efects in American paddlefsh (Polyodon spathula) that is known to be highly sensitive
to EFs (Cada et al., 2012). However, another fsh of known EMF sensitivity, lake sturgeons (Acipenser
fulvescens) displayed temporarily altered swimming behavior when exposed to variable MFs (Cada
et al., 2012). Other than the brief reactions by sturgeon to the variable felds reported here, no long-term