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You need to register to read this article about an amazing migration
by the Bar-tailed Godwits, flying 5-9 days without rest to cover over 7000 miles. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...102102685.html |
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About 10 years ago Charlie Spratt, John Good and I visited a Laysan
albatross colony on Kauai (Hawaii) and learned of a research project that was tracking the birds with gps telemetry. There was a website where you could get the lat/longs of the subject birds and track them on your National Geographic globe. During the nesting season when the birds were feeding their young they would soar (dynamically) to about 100 miles off Seattle, then down to about San Francisco and back to the nest, barf up a meal for the chick and do it all over again. Some of the birds made similar trips to the Aleutians. Karl Striedieck "Frank Whiteley" wrote in message ... You need to register to read this article about an amazing migration by the Bar-tailed Godwits, flying 5-9 days without rest to cover over 7000 miles. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...102102685.html |
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On Oct 24, 5:58*pm, "Karl Striedieck" wrote:
About 10 years ago Charlie Spratt, John Good and I visited a Laysan albatross colony on Kauai (Hawaii) and learned of a research project that was tracking the birds with gps telemetry. There was a website where you could get the lat/longs of the subject birds and track them on your National Geographic globe. During the nesting season when the birds were feeding their young they would soar (dynamically) to about 100 miles off Seattle, then down to about San Francisco and back to the nest, barf up a meal for the chick and do it all over again. Some of the birds made similar trips to the Aleutians. Karl Striedieck "Frank Whiteley" wrote in message ... You need to register to read this article about an amazing migration by the Bar-tailed Godwits, flying 5-9 days without rest to cover over 7000 miles. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...08/10/21/AR200... On a recent visit to the Albatross Colony on the south island of New Zealand, I discovered that researchers report juveniles fly from the nest and only return for breeding, maybe a year or two later, in which period they don't set foot on land. In the process, they circumnavigate the globe several times. I watched and photographed several birds dynamic soaring and they definitely use the zooming technique that has been described here before. Of course, albatrosses are pretty big. The migration of smaller birds and butterflies is perhaps more astonishing. Mike |
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On Oct 26, 11:46*am, Mike the Strike wrote:
in which period they don't set foot on land. But curious minds want to know if they alight on the water. Andy |
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On Oct 28, 1:31*pm, Andy wrote:
On Oct 26, 11:46*am, Mike the Strike wrote: in which period they don't set foot on land. But curious minds want to know if they alight on the water. They do. The detail is in http://www.smithsonianmag.com/specia...nter/alba.html Apparently they can make shallow dives under water, and, if they land on water, they can become trapped there - becalmed. See also How to Spy on an Albatross - tracking birds - http://findarticles.com/p/articles/m...ch/ai_53939202 Breeding Season in Albatross Land http://www.topp.org/blog/breeding_season_albatross_land a lovely photo of an albatross http://www.pnas.org/content/105/12.cover-expansion and the article to which it refers - Evidence for olfactory search in wandering albatross http://www.pnas.org/content/105/12/4576 And a technical article with some amazing tracking maps - Interpolation of animal tracking data in a fluid environment http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/conten...cetype=H WFIG Dan Johnson |
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