Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 May 2001
This and the following paper were first presented at the RIN01 Conference held in Oxford under the auspices of the Animal Navigation Special Interest Group, April 2001.
Flight paths of homing pigeons were measured with a newly developed recorder based on GPS. The device consists of a GPS receiver board, a logging facility, an antenna, a power supply, a DC-DC converter and a casing. It has a weight of 33 grams and works reliably with a sampling rate of 1 Hz for an operating time of about three hours, providing time-indexed data on geographic positions, ground speed and altitude. The devices are fixed to the birds with a harness, and the data are downloaded when the bird is re-captured. The measured flight paths show many details : for example, initial loops flown immediately after release and large detours flown by some pigeons. Three examples of flight paths are presented from a release site 17·3 km northeast of the home loft in Frankfurt. Mean speed in flight, duration of breaks and total length of the flight path were calculated. The pigeons chose different routes and have different individual tendencies to fly loops over the village close to the release site.