Phillips, John B.Jorge, PauloMuheim, Rachel2020-07-162020-07-162010-02-02Interface 7, S241–S2561742-5662http://hdl.handle.net/10400.12/7708Magnetic compass orientation by amphibians, and some insects, is mediated by a light-dependent magnetoreception mechanism. Cryptochrome photopigments, best known for their role in circadian rhythms, are proposed to mediate such responses. In this paper, we explore light-dependent properties of magnetic sensing at three levels: (i) behavioural (wavelength-dependent effects of light on magnetic compass orientation), (ii) physiological (photoreceptors/photopigment systems with properties suggesting a role in magnetoreception), and (iii) molecular (cryptochrome-based and non-cryptochrome-based signalling pathways that are compatible with behavioural responses). Our goal is to identify photoreceptors and signalling pathways that are likely to play a specialized role in magnetoreception in order to definitively answer the question of whether the effects of light on magnetic compass orientation are mediated by a light-dependent magnetoreception mechanism, or instead are due to input from a non-light-dependent (e.g. magnetite-based) magnetoreception mechanism that secondarily interacts with other light-dependent processes.engMagnetoreceptionPhotoreceptionCryptochromePinealCompound eye;Magnetic compassLight-dependent magnetic compass orientation in amphibians and insects: candidate receptors and candidate molecular mechanismsjournal article10.1098/rsif.2009.0459.focus