Professor Richard Holland
Professor in Animal Behaviour / Director of Research

Affiliations
Contact info
Room: 531 Brambell
Email: r.holland@bangor.ac.uk
Phone: +44 (0)1248 382344
Web: Bangor Animal Navigation Group Google Scholar Researchgate
My research and teaching interests fall broadly in the area of animal behaviour and sensory biology. I am the course co-ordinator for the Zoology with Animal Behaviour degree (C3D3) and teach on several animal behaviour focused modules, as well as ornithology. My research questions focus the cognitive processes and sensory mechanisms by which animals navigate and migrate. While my principle focus is at the level of the whole organism I also incorporate aspects of neurobiology, molecular biology, and physics to identify the environmental cues, sensory pathways and mechanisms used by animals to decide how, when and where to move. My work also operates in a comparative framework as I compare and contrast across species, taxa, age class, spatial scale and sensory mechanisms to reveal how natural selection has acted to shape navigation behaviour in different animal groups. New avenues my lab is exploring include the impact of artificial light and electromagnetic noise on navigation and spatial cognition, and the impact of antimicrobial resistant bacteria on bird behaviour.
Biography:
2021-2024, Director of Research, School of Natural Sciences
2020-current, Professor in Animal Behaviour
2017-2020, Senior Lecturer, Bangor University
2016-2017, Lecturer, Bangor University
2011-2016, Lecturer, Queen’s University Belfast
2009-2010, Research scientist, Max Planck Institute for Ornithology
2006-2008, Marie Curie Outgoing International fellow, Princeton University and University of Leeds
2002-2005, Postdoctoral research fellow, University of Leeds
1999-2002, Postdoctoral research fellow, University of Nebraska
1994-1998, DPhil, Oxford University
1990-1993, BSc (Hons), University of Nottingham
Research Area
- 2020
- Published
Anosmic migrating songbirds demonstrate a compensatory response following long-distance translocation: a radio-tracking study
Kishkinev, D., Anashina, A., Ishchenko, I. & Holland, R. A., Jan 2020, In: Journal of Ornithology. 161, 1, p. 47-57Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
Is There Visual Lateralisation of the Sun Compass in Homing Pigeons?
Griffiths, C., Holland, R. & Gagliardo, A., 5 May 2020, In: Symmetry. 12, 5, 740.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- 2021
- Published
Navigation by extrapolation of geomagnetic cues in a migratory songbird
Kishkinev, D., Packmor, F., Thomas, Z., Hans, W., Mouritsen, H., Chernetsov, N. & Holland, R., 12 Apr 2021, In: Current Biology. 31, 7, p. 1563-1569Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
Corneal sensitivity is required for orientation in free-flying migratory bats
Lindecke, O., Holland, R., Petersons, G. & Voigt, C. C., 5 May 2021, In: Communications Biology. 4, 1, 522.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
Repeated training of homing pigeons reveals age dependent idiosyncrasy and visual landmark use.
Griffiths, C., Schiffner, I., Price, E., Charnell-Hughes, M., Kishkinev, D. & Holland, R., Jul 2021, In: Animal Behaviour. 177, p. 159-170Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
A magnet attached to the forehead disrupts magnetic compass orientation in a migratory songbird
Packmor, F., Kishkinev, D., Bittermann, F., Kofler, B., Machowetz, C., Zechmeister, T., Zawadzki, L., Guilford, T. & Holland, R., Nov 2021, In: Journal of Experimental Biology. 224, 22, 10 p., 243337.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
Nature’s GPS: how animals use the natural world to perform extraordinary feats of navigation
Holland, R., 30 Dec 2021, The Conversation.Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article
- 2022
- Published
A comparison of machine-learning assisted optical and thermal camera systems for beehive activity counting
Morton Williams, S., Bariselli, S., Palego, C., Holland, R. & Cross, P., 1 Dec 2022, In: Smart Agricultural Technology. 2, 100038.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- 2023
- Published
Sense of doubt: Inaccurate and alternate locations of virtual magnetic displacements may give a distorted view of animal magnetoreception ability
Schneider, W., Holland, R., Packmor, F. & Lindecke, O., 20 Feb 2023, In: Communications Biology. 6, 1, 8 p., 187.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
Over 50 years of behavioural evidence on the magnetic sense in animals: what has been learnt and how?
Schneider, W., Holland, R. & Lindecke, O., Mar 2023, In: The European Physical Journal Special Topics. 232, 2, p. 269-278 10 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Review article › peer-review
- Published
Migratory bats are sensitive to magnetic inclination changes during the compass calibration period
Schneider, W. T., Holland, R. A., Keišs, O. & Lindecke, O., Nov 2023, In: Biology letters. 19, 11, 20230181.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- 2024
- Published
The effect of observing trained conspecifics on the performance and motivation of goldfish, Carassius auratus, in a spatial task
Blane, J. C. & Holland, R. A., Apr 2024, In: Behavioural Processes. 217, 105021.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
A refined magnetic pulse treatment method for magnetic navigation experiments with adequate sham control: a case study on free-flying songbirds
Karwinkel, T., Winklhofer, M., Allenstein, D., Burst, V., Christoph, P., Holland, R., Huppop, O., Steen, J., Bairlein, F. & Schamaljohann, H., 15 May 2024, In: Journal of the Royal Society: Interface. 21, 214Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
Reply to "Animal magnetic sensitivity and magnetic displacement experiments
Schneider, W., Wynn, J., Packmor, F., Lindecke, O. & Holland, R., 27 May 2024, In: Communications Biology. 7, 1, p. 651 1 p., 651.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
A conceptual framework on the role of magnetic cues in songbird migration ecology
Karwinkel, T., Peter, A., Holland, R., Thorup, K., Bairlein, F. & Schmaljohann, H., Aug 2024, In: Biological Reviews. 99, 4, p. 1576-1593 18 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
- Published
Migratory birds can extract positional information from magnetic inclination and magnetic declination alone
Packmor, F., Kishkinev, D., Zechmeister, T., Mouritsen, H. & Holland, R., Nov 2024, In: Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 291, 2034Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review