Birds’ eyes, not beaks, sense magnetic fields

New study pinpoints migratory songbirds’ magnetic compass in a specific brain region

A cell in the eye may be worth two in the beak, at least when it comes to a migratory bird’s magnetic compass. In European robins, a visual center in the brain and light-sensing cells in the eye — not magnetic sensing cells in the beak — allow the songbirds to sense which direction is north and migrate correctly, a new study finds.