PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Magellanic penguins may use currents to conserve energy on long journeys

Alternating between traveling in a direct route with swimming with the flow of the current maximizes navigation efficiency

2025-07-17
(Press-News.org) Currents can affect marine animals’ locomotion, energy expenditure and ability to navigate; the force of currents may cause them to drift off-course of their intended trajectory. A study published July 17th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Richard Michael Gunner at the Max-Planck-Institut für Verhaltensbiologie, Germany, suggests that Magellanic penguins can sense current drift and maximize navigation efficiency by alternating between traveling in a direct route in calm conditions and swimming with the flow of strong currents allowing them to conserve energy while navigating toward their colony.

Magellanic penguins travel long distances without visual landmarks to forage and return to their colonies to feed their chicks. However, penguins’ ability to adapt their routes to current drift without visual cues over long distances is poorly understood. To investigate penguins’ ability to orient toward their colony and whether they can sense current drifts, researchers fitted 27 adult penguins at the San Lorenzo Magellanic penguin colony, Peninsula Valdés, Argentina, with GPS and IMU loggers and recorded one foraging trip made by each penguin before recapturing to remove the devices. The researchers analyzed a suite of movement parameters, including dive profiles, compass headings, speeds and durations, to model the penguins’ navigation under different current conditions.

The researchers found that penguins alternate between traveling in a direct route with swimming with the flow of the current to maximize navigation efficiency. In calm currents, penguins maintained precise line-of-sight routes to their colony. In stronger currents, they swam with the direction of the current flow, increasing travel distance, but allowing them to conserve energy, suggesting that penguins are aware of current drift relative to their out-of-sight destination. These findings require further study as the sample was limited to a single trip made by 27 penguins. Future research may attempt to replicate the results in other penguin populations, other marine animal species, and to explain the exact mechanism by which penguins sense and adapt to varying ocean currents.

According to the authors, “Our results indicate that penguins notice discrepancies between their intended path and actual displacement over ground, then adjust accordingly. While penguins still aim broadly toward the colony under strong currents, they exhibit a more dispersed heading distribution, potentially reflecting repeated or fine-scale corrections to compensate for the drift. Such behavior is consistent with effective navigation even when out of sight of land. This central finding is a valuable contribution to our understanding of navigation ability in marine animals.”

The authors add, “Magellanic penguins finding their way back to their nests from the open ocean subtly adjust their headings to exploit tidal currents, following paths that reduce energy costs while maintaining remarkable accuracy. Rather than swimming directly home, they drift laterally with the tides, balancing travel efficiency with opportunistic foraging along the way.”

 

In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology: http://plos.io/4e9hAMw

Citation: Gunner RM, Quintana F, Tonini MH, Holton MD, Yoda K, Crofoot MC, et al. (2025) Penguins exploit tidal currents for efficient navigation and opportunistic foraging. PLoS Biol 23(7): e3002981. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002981

Author countries: Germany, Argentina, United Kingdom, Japan, Panama

Funding: The funding for this work was supported by the National Agency for Science Promotion, Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación Productiva, Argentina (PICT2018-01480 to FQ). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Novel dome-celled aerogels maintain superelasticity despite temperature extremes

2025-07-17
Using a novel dome-shaped structural design, researchers present a chemically diverse collection of aerogels that remain elastic and mechanically intact under extreme temperatures. The findings open the door for the fabrication of new aerogel materials suited to extreme environments required for applications in space, aerospace, energy, and high-temperature industries. Aerogels are an advanced class of materials characterized by their extremely low density and high porosity, which makes them ideal for a wide range of applications. However, despite improvements in design and fabrication, aerogels still face challenges in maintaining thermomechanical ...

Controlled human gut colonization by an engineered microbial therapeutic

2025-07-17
Engineered gut bacteria designed to treat kidney stones successfully colonized the gut microbiome and reduced oxalate levels in animal models and early clinical trials in humans, researchers report. The findings offer a promising, yet still imperfect, step toward microbial therapies. Efforts to manipulate the gut microbiome using engineered bacteria for therapeutic purposes have shown promise in animals, but often fail in clinical settings due to being hindered by inconsistent colonization. To overcome this challenge, Weston Whitaker and colleagues focused on Phocaeicola vulgatus, a common gut bacterium, and engineered it to consume the seaweed-derived nutrient, porphyran. ...

Vaccination could mitigate climate-driven disruptions to malaria control

2025-07-17
Tropical cyclones in Madagascar lead to sharp spikes in malaria infections – particularly in children – due to interruptions in control efforts, according to a new study. However, the findings show that newly introduced long-lasting vaccines can help to mitigate these gaps. This points to pathways to climate-resilient control strategies in malaria-prone regions. Malaria, already a persistent global health challenge, poses new threats from climate change, not only through rising temperatures that shift mosquito dynamics but also via extreme weather events like tropical cyclones. Such disasters can severely ...

Smartphone-based earthquake detection and early warning system rivals traditional, seismic network based alternatives

2025-07-17
A global Android smartphone-based earthquake detection and early warning system can detect seismic activity in real time and deliver life-saving alerts with effectiveness rivaling that of traditional seismic networks, according to a new study. Despite our ability to predict where they are likely to occur, earthquakes continue to pose a serious threat to communities worldwide. Large-scale events can result in widespread loss of life and injury. These risks underscore the urgent need for protective measures including earthquake ...

First winner of AAAS-Chen Institute Prize builds tool to visualize biomolecular interactions

2025-07-17
For his work to help capture and view dynamic small-scale behaviors of biomolecules that have gone unseen – and which are critical to applications like drug development – Zhuoran Qiao has been awarded the inaugural Chen Institute and Science Prize for Al Accelerated Research. The prize recognizes innovative young researchers who apply techniques in artificial intelligence to help the research community solve important problems and accelerate their work. “I was thrilled to partner with the Chen Institute to launch this new prize initiative,” said Yury V. Suleymanov, senior editor at Science. “Our winner, ...

Research spotlight: Study finds a protective kidney RNA that could transform disease treatment

2025-07-17
Q: How would you summarize your study for a lay audience? Cells contain helper molecules called transfer RNAs (tRNAs), which carry building blocks (amino acids) to make proteins. These tRNAs can be broken down into smaller pieces called tRNA-derived RNAs (tsRNAs or tDRs) that have new jobs - to help cells deal with stress and challenging situations. In this study, we focused on one specific tDR, called tRNA-Asp-GTC-3’tDR, which becomes more abundant during stress. tRNA-Asp-GTC-3’tDR is present at baseline in kidney cells and increases in response to disease-related stress signals in cell culture and several mouse models of kidney diseases. ...

Research Spotlight: Study reveals an unexpected role for protein aggregates in brain disease

2025-07-17
Raghu R. Chivukula, MD, PhD, a physician-investigator in the Departments of Medicine & Surgery and the Center for Genomic Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, is the senior author of a paper published in Science, “Polyglycine-mediated aggregation of FAM98B disrupts tRNA processing in GGC repeat disorders.”   Q: How would you summarize your study for a lay audience? Neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease, are devastating and incurable diseases. Although many neurodegenerative ...

UK Government and UK Research and Innovation join forces to launch multi-billion-pound compute roadmap

2025-07-17
Quicker health diagnoses, smarter energy supplies, tackling climate change and improved public service delivery – just some huge potential benefits of the new compute roadmap, launched by DSIT and UKRI. The roadmap heralds a significant increase in publicly accessible compute capacity. Investments include up to £2 billion to deliver a holistic and user-centred compute ecosystem with  £1 billion to expand the AI Research Resource 20-fold by 2030. It also provides up to £750 million for UKRI to invest in a new national supercomputing service at Edinburgh. UKRI is further ...

New study in JAMA Network Open shows current approaches to assessing preeclampsia risk are failing the majority of pregnant moms

2025-07-17
South San Francisco, CA (July 17, 2025) - A new study sponsored by Mirvie, which is the first to evaluate U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) guidelines for preeclampsia risk and aspirin prescription in a single, nationally representative, prospective population, found while high-risk factors had sufficient value in estimating risk, there’s limited value for the moderate risk category - leading to nonspecific recommendations for aspirin use, a recognized prevention tool.    This cohort study of 5684 participants, culled from the multi-center Miracle of Life prospective study, found the guidelines ...

An FDA-backed metric used to determine effectiveness of rectal cancer drugs may be unreliable, says new study

2025-07-17
A new study by a Tulane University researcher casts doubt on a widely used shortcut in rectal cancer drug trials, raising concerns that some treatments may be fast-tracked for approval without evidence they help patients live longer. The study, published in JAMA Network Open in collaboration with researchers at Mayo Clinic in Arizona, found that the absence of detectable tumors after treatment – a key metric in clinical cancer drug trials known as pathologic complete response or pCR – does not reliably predict an improvement in long-term survival for patients diagnosed with ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Unsupervised strategies for naïve animals: New model of adaptive decision making inspired by baby chicks, turtles and insects

How cities primed spotted lanternflies to thrive in the US

UK polling clerks struggle to spot fake IDs, study reveals

How mindfulness can support GenAI use in transforming project management

Physical fitness of transgender and cisgender women is comparable, current evidence suggests

Duplicate medical records linked to 5-fold heightened risk of inpatient death

Air ambulance pre-hospital care may make surviving critical injury more likely

Significant gaps persist in regional UK access to 24/7 air ambulance services

Reproduction in space, an environment hostile to human biology

Political division in the US surged from 2008 onwards, study suggests

No need for rare earths or liquid helium! Cryogenic cooling material composed solely of abundant elements

Urban light pollution alters nighttime hormones in sharks, study shows

Pregnancy, breastfeeding associated with higher levels of cognitive function for postmenopausal women

Tiny dots, big impact: Using light to scrub industrial dyes from our water

Scientists uncover how biochar microzones help protect crops from toxic cadmium

Graphene-based materials show promise for tackling new environmental contaminants

Where fires used to be frequent, old forests now face high risk of devastating blazes

Emotional support from social media found to reduce anxiety

Backward walking study offers potential new treatment to improve mobility and decrease falls in multiple sclerosis patients

Top recognition awarded to 11 stroke researchers for science, brain health contributions

New paper proposes a framework for assessing the trustworthiness of research

Porto Summit drives critical cooperation on submarine cable resilience

University of Cincinnati Cancer Center tests treatment using ‘glioblastoma-on-a-chip’ and wafer technology

IPO pay gap hiding in plain sight: Study reveals hidden cost of ‘cheap stock’

It has been clarified that a fungus living in our body can make melanoma more aggressive

Paid sick leave as disease prevention

Did we just see a black hole explode? Physicists at UMass Amherst think so—and it could explain (almost) everything

Study highlights stressed faults in potential shale gas region in South Africa

Human vaginal microbiome is shaped by competition for resources

Test strip breakthrough for accessible diagnosis

[Press-News.org] Magellanic penguins may use currents to conserve energy on long journeys
Alternating between traveling in a direct route with swimming with the flow of the current maximizes navigation efficiency