
Sea turtles ‘dance' when their superpower leads them to food
Now, a new study, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, reveals loggerhead turtles, the most abundant sea turtle species nesting in the United States, learn the magnetic fields of specific geographic locations. This superpower likely helps them get back to ecologically important areas for nesting and feeding.
While earlier research has unveiled turtles consistently revisit specific sites and also use magnetic fields to navigate, the researchers said this study is the first of its kind to determine loggerheads memorize these magnetic fields, particularly ones associated with food sources, to return to once they finish migrating.
Researchers found captive juvenile loggerheads respond to magnetic conditioning by what the team described as 'dancing' in anticipation of food in fields where they were previously fed, indicating they associate magnetic cues with feeding sites.
The study also unlocked a key finding in turtle navigation. Loggerheads rely on two distinct magnetic systems — a magnetic map for tracking locations and a magnetic compass for orienting direction.
When loggerheads are exposed to radiofrequency, or RF, waves — the same type of radiation emitted by devices such as mobile phones and radio transmitters — their magnetic map remains stable, while their compass is disrupted.
This revelation raises conservation concerns, as boating activity and device usage near nesting beaches may interfere with turtles' ability to migrate, according to lead study author Dr. Kayla Goforth, a postdoctoral research associate in the department of biology at Texas A&M University, who worked on the research as a doctoral student at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Researchers suggest minimizing RF waves in key turtle habitats to help protect these ancient sea creatures.
What makes turtles 'dance'
Turtles can detect all Earth-strength magnetic fields, ranging from around 25,000 nanoteslas to 65,000 nanoteslas — a measure of magnetic field intensity, according to Goforth.
To understand the magnetic receptors of turtles, researchers collected 14 to 16 newly hatched loggerhead turtles each August from 2017 to 2020. The turtles emerged from eight to 10 different nests from Bald Head Island, North Carolina.
The team housed the turtles in individual tanks with controlled water temperatures and a standard diet to simulate natural seawater conditions.
Previous turtle experiments have used magnetic intensities with at least a 2,000-nanotesla field difference, but Goforth and her team chose locations along the US East Coast throughout the Atlantic Ocean and developed a coil system to produce fields between 2,000 and 10,000 nanoteslas for variation.
Over a two-month conditioning period, the study team placed the turtles in small buckets of artificial seawater and exposed them to two different magnetic fields for equal durations. One field matched the magnetic force of a site in the Gulf of Mexico and was associated with food (the 'rewarded' field), while the other simulated the magnetic flux of a site near New Hampshire and had no food (the 'unrewarded' field).
Once the conditioning ended, turtles were tested again in both magnetic fields, but this time, neither contained food, allowing researchers to determine whether the turtles had learned to associate the 'rewarded' field with feeding.
In the 'rewarded' field, all the marine reptiles exhibited some extent of 'turtle dance' behavior, which included tilting their bodies vertically, holding their heads near or above the water's surface, opening their mouths, quickly moving their front flippers, and sometimes even spinning in place, according to the study.
To confirm the consistency of these findings across different sites, the researchers conducted the same experiment using magnetic fields that mimicked those off the coasts of Cuba versus Delaware, Maine versus Florida, and two additional locations.
In each of the five trials, about 80% of the turtles showed more 'dancing' in the 'rewarded' fields compared with the 'unrewarded,' demonstrating that this skill is used globally, not just in one specific location.
While the 'turtle dance' is particularly charming, Goforth noted this behavior likely only occurs in captivity. However, the movement pattern provides a useful measure to show whether the turtles learned the magnetic field and correlated it to food.
After the initial experiment, the scientists tested 16 turtles again four months later to evaluate their long-term memory. Even without additional reinforcement, 80% of the loggerheads showed greater 'dancing' in the 'rewarded' field, although the overall amount of movement was lower, Goforth said.
Turtles likely remember magnetic conditioning for a much longer duration, Goforth noted, since most loggerheads leave their nesting beach as hatchlings and return around 20 years later to lay their first nest.
Using Earth's magnetic field for navigation
Once the researchers established turtles respond to magnetic fields associated with food, they wanted to determine whether turtles utilize the same or different biological systems for their magnetic map (knowing where they are) and their magnetic compass (knowing which direction to go).
Using radiofrequency waves — a type of energy that can disrupt biological sensors such as the ones birds use to detect Earth's magnetic field — researchers tested whether the turtles could still detect their magnetic map and magnetic compass.
One group of turtles was tested without RF waves, while the other was tested with RF waves. Normally, turtles swim in a certain direction depending on the field they live in to stay within the right ocean currents for migration. However, when RF waves were present, the turtles swam randomly, indicating their compass was disrupted.
Their ability to recognize the magnetic map (or food-associated locations) remained intact, however, even with RF interference.
'This understanding provides additional information towards figuring out how sea turtles, and other animals, are able to navigate hundreds and thousands of miles across oceans that don't have obvious physical features to help with navigation,' said Dr. Daniel Evans, a research biologist with the Sea Turtle Conservancy via email. Evans was not involved in the study.
To investigate further how turtles interpret magnetic cues, the study team examined the two key features of Earth's magnetic field: inclination, or the tilt of magnetic field lines relative to Earth's surface, and intensity, or the strength of the magnetic field.
The researchers generated mismatched magnetic fields by combining the inclination from one geographic location with the intensity from another, swapping the values throughout the trials.
Turtles did not recognize a place unless both inclination and intensity matched, proving they rely on a combination of these factors to determine their location.
This latest research reveals that, similar to birds and amphibians, turtles also rely on dual magnetoreception systems, which could provide further insights into other migratory vertebrates.
Looking toward sea turtle conservation
The most important conservation takeaway from this research is that RF waves produced by electronic devices negatively affect sea turtles' navigation, Goforth emphasized.
If turtles reside in ocean areas with heavy boat traffic or come to beaches to nest where people use phones frequently, their navigational senses could be disrupted.
Companies and individuals can take proactive measures by limiting device usage on the water or at beaches to minimize disruptions to sea turtles.
'From a conservation standpoint, we now need to consider potential impacts of human activities on these different mechanisms,' Evans said. '(The) areas sea turtles keep returning to are important for those turtles, and these areas need strong consideration for protection and conservation.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Hubble telescope uncovers rare star born from cosmic collision: 'A very different history from what we would have guessed'
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope have discovered that a seemingly ordinary white dwarf star is actually the result of a dramatic stellar merger. This result, detailed in a new study led by Snehalata Sahu and Boris Gaensicke of the University of Warwick in the U.K., suggests that other "normal-looking" white dwarfs scattered throughout the universe could also have violent pasts. "It's a discovery that underlines things may be different from what they appear to us at first glance," Gaensicke, study co-author and a professor of physics at the University of Warwick who serves as the principal investigator of the Hubble program, said in a statement. "Until now, this appeared as a normal white dwarf, but Hubble's ultraviolet vision revealed that it had a very different history from what we would have guessed." The star, named WD 0525+526, is located about 128 light-years from Earth. Though it appeared rather standard at first glance through visible light, further observations using the Hubble telescope revealed telltale signs of a more turbulent origin, the new study reports. White dwarfs are the dense remnants of stars like our sun that have exhausted their fuel supplies and collapsed into Earth-size objects. Despite their small size, however, they can pack in up to 1.4 times the mass of the sun. Most white dwarfs form from the predictable evolution of single stars nearing the final days of their life cycles, which is a path our own sun is expected to follow in about 5 billion years. However, WD 0525+526 may have followed a very different path. Instead of forming from one dying star, it appears to have emerged from the violent collision and merger of two stars. This dramatic past, the new study says, left subtle but detectable fingerprints in the white dwarf's atmospheric makeup. When Gaensicke and his team examined WD 0525+526 with Hubble's ultraviolet instruments, they detected an unusual amount of carbon in the star's atmosphere — a key sign the star was formed in a merger. Typically, white dwarfs have outer layers of hydrogen and helium that obscure their carbon-rich cores. But in mergers such as this one, the intense collision can strip away much of these outer layers, allowing carbon to rise to the surface. The signals of such stars are difficult to detect in visible light, but become clearer in ultraviolet wavelengths — and that's where Hubble excels. WD 0525+526 is remarkable even among the small number of white dwarfs known to be merger remnants, according to the statement. It has a surface temperature of nearly 21,000 Kelvin (about 37,000 degrees Fahrenheit) and a mass 1.2 times that of the sun, making it both hotter and more massive than others in this rare category, the study notes. Because WD 0525+526 appeared completely normal in visible light, astronomers now suspect that many more white dwarfs could be hiding similar explosive origins. "We would like to extend our research on this topic by exploring how common carbon white dwarfs are among similar white dwarfs, and how many stellar mergers are hiding among the normal white dwarf family," Antoine Bedrad, a researcher at the University of Warwick who co-led the study, said in the statement. RELATED STORIES: — White dwarfs: Facts about the dense stellar remnants — White dwarfs are 'heavy metal' zombie stars endlessly cannibalizing their dead planetary systems — What is dark energy? Exploding white dwarf stars may help us crack the case "That will be an important contribution to our understanding of white dwarf binaries, and the pathways to supernova explosions." This research is described in a paper published Aug. 6 in the journal Nature Astronomy.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Milky Way to remain visible in August across US. Here's when, how to see our galaxy
August has been a month jam-packed with cosmic phenomena visible from Earth – from nebulas to meteor showers to planetary conjunctions. But the month isn't over yet. And now, add to the mix one of the last best opportunities to see the Milky Way. The center of our galaxy is teeming with billions of stars that routinely become bright and vibrant at certain times of the year – if you're in the right place at the right time. As summer nears its end, so, too, does the "Milky Way season" in the United States. Fortunately, stargazers still have a chance to glimpse the galaxy's iconic band of hazy light as it arcs across the night sky. The best part? You don't need fancy telescopes or equipment to view it − just your eyes, dark skies and maybe a camera, if you're into astral photography. Here's everything to know about our Milky Way, including how to see the stunning natural phenomenon. Mars: 'Enhanced' photo from Perseverance shows Mars under Earth-like skies What is the Milky Way galaxy? The Milky Way is our home galaxy with a disc of stars that spans more than 100,000 light-years. Because it appears as a rotating disc curving out from a dense central region, the Milky Way is known as a spiral galaxy. Our planet sits along one of the galaxy's spiral arms, about halfway from the center, according to NASA. The Milky Way sits in a cosmic neighborhood called the Local Group that includes more than 50 other galaxies. Those galaxies can be as "small" as a dwarf galaxy, with up to only a few billion stars, or as large as Andromeda, our nearest large galactic neighbor. Why is it called the Milky Way? The Milky Way got its name because from our perspective on Earth, it appears as a faint, milky band of light stretching across the sky. Is the Milky Way visible from Earth? Though the Milky Way is generally always visible from Earth, certain times of year are better for stargazers to catch a glimpse of the band of billions of stars. "Milky Way season," when the galaxy's bright center becomes easier to see from Earth, typically runs from February to October, according to the Milky Way photography website Capture the Atlas. But because visibility from Earth depends on the latitude, the further south you go, the longer the Milky Way season will last. In the Northern Hemisphere, which includes the continental United States, the best time to see the Milky Way is generally from March to September, according to Capture the Atlas. What you're looking at when the Milky Way is visible is the bright center of our galaxy, "seen edge-on from our position within the galaxy's disk," Preston Dyches, who hosts NASA's "What's Up," a monthly video series that describes what's happening in the night sky, wrote in June for NASA. When can you see the Milky Way in August 2025? The center of the Milky Way, which Dyches refers to as "the core," became visible in June and is expected to shine every night through August as it gets higher in a darker sky. Typically, the sky is darkest from about midnight to 5 a.m., according to Capture the Atlas. You can check sunrise and sunset times at your location using the website TimeAndDate. "This doesn't mean that as soon as the sun goes down you can see the Milky Way," writes Dan Zafra, co-founder of Capture the Atlas. "Even if it's in the sky, the Milky Way will be barely visible during blue hour, so you'll have to wait at least until the end of the astronomical twilight to see all the details of the Milky Way." From June to August, the Milky Way will be diagonal at the beginning of the night, vertical during the middle of the night, and low above the horizon at the end of the night, according to Capture the Atlas. How can you see the Milky Way? Here are some tips Stargazers can observe the Milky Way by looking for the Summer Triangle, a shape formed by three bright stars that spans across the Milky Way, according to science news website LiveScience. In the Northern Hemisphere, the Milky Way rises in the southeast, travels across the southern sky and sets in the southwest, according to Spectators will have the best luck on cloud-free nights and away from city light pollution. DarkSky International maintains a website that lists all designated dark sky communities around the world, including 159 locations in the United States. Eric Lagatta is the Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at elagatta@ This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Center of Milky Way will be visible in August. How to see it in US
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
It's Official: NASA Is Giving Up on Climate Change Science
Junk Science In a major blow to climate change science, NASA is officially not continuing its work studying global warming and will instead just stick to space exploration. During a Fox Business news segment, acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy (who also happens to be the Secretary of Transportation) dropped the bombshell during a live interview on Thursday. "All the climate science and all of the other priorities that the last administration had at NASA we're going to move aside, and all of the science that we do is going to be directed towards exploration, which is the mission of NASA," he said. "That's why we have NASA — is to explore, not to do all of these Earth sciences." The news is not so surprising given the fact that President Donald Trump has long been known to be a climate change denier. His anti-science agenda has systematically undercut any climate research. Just last month, the Department of Energy issued an error-riddled report that denied the existence and impact of global warming. Giving Up For NASA, the writing was on the wall when Trump officials forbade the space agency from hosting important climate assessment information on its website. Trump officials had also ordered two important satellites that collect climate information to be terminated, which critics say doesn't make any sense and could even break the law. NASA mothballing its work on climate change is pretty galling — especially in light of Duffy's remarks — because the space agency has a long record of studying our planet and its various natural systems since at least the 1960s. The agency's contributions towards climate science research have been far-reaching to say the very least. Because of all the years of groundwork, scientists are, for instance, able to predict and model future Earth conditions, and even apply climate science work to determine whether exoplanets can support life. In short, the Trump administration's decision seems like an extremely short-sighted move that will have unforeseen impacts in the future. Most of all, it shows that administration officials have little respect for the scientists and engineers at NASA. More on NASA: White House Orders NASA to Destroy Important Satellite Solve the daily Crossword