Each year, Bogong moths in Australia embark on a 620-mile journey to escape the summer heat by retreating to cool alpine caves. These nocturnal insects then return home to breed and die, completing a round-trip migration that has long puzzled scientists. A new study, however, has uncovered an astonishing secret: these moths navigate using the stars, making them the first invertebrates known to do so over such long distances.
The remarkable research, published in Nature, reveals how Bogong moths rely on celestial aspects of the night sky, alongside Earth’s magnetic field, to find their way. In lab tests, when star patterns were scrambled, the moths became disoriented. When patterns remained natural, they managed precise navigation. This is all the more stunning because these insects have very tiny brains; we’re talking smaller than a grain of rice! Scientists still don’t know which celestial features guide them, but possibilities include the Milky Way or other bright markers.
This slideshow details the science behind such an extraordinary discovery. We explore how researchers cracked the moths’ secret, what it tells us about insect intelligence, and which other animals navigate by starlight. The new finding is an awe-inspiring example of nature’s magnificent tiny travelers.
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- Moth brain cells responded to specific alignments of stars in the night sky.
- Scientists don’t yet know exactly which features guide the moths.
- Possibilities include the Milky Way or bright nebulae as reference points.
- These cues are likely used in combination with Earth’s magnetic field.
Brains Smaller Than Rice, But Smart
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- Bogong moth brains are tiny—smaller than a grain of rice.
- Despite that, they manage a long and complex migration each year.
- It’s an impressive example of sophisticated navigation in a small package.
- Their behavior challenges assumptions about invertebrate intelligence.
Other Creatures That Follow the Stars
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©Villiers Steyn/Shutterstock.com
- Birds have long used stars to migrate across continents.
- Dung beetles use the Milky Way to roll dung in a straight line.
- Bogong moths now join this elite group of celestial navigators.
- It reveals how nature finds elegant ways to solve directional challenges.
The post Celestial Navigation: The Moth That Migrates 600 Miles Via Starlight appeared first on A-Z Animals.