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Alaska Bird Makes Longest Nonstop Flight Ever Measured
National Geographic News ^ | 9-14-2007 | Dave Hansford

Posted on 09/14/2007 2:18:38 PM PDT by blam

Alaska Bird Makes Longest Nonstop Flight Ever Measured

Dave Hansford in Wellington, New Zealand
for National Geographic News

September 14, 2007

A female shorebird was recently found to have flown 7,145 miles (11,500 kilometers) nonstop from Alaska to New Zealand—without taking a break for food or drink.

It's the longest nonstop bird migration ever measured, according to biologists who tracked the flight using satellite tags.

The bird, a wader called a bar-tailed godwit, completed the journey in nine days.

In addition to demonstrating the bird's surprising endurance, the trek confirms that godwits make the southbound trip of their annual migration directly across the vast Pacific rather than along the East Asian coast, scientists said.

"This shows how incredible and extreme birds can be," said Phil Battley of New Zealand's Massey University, who took part in the study.

"The prospect of a bird flying all the way across the Pacific was so much further than what we thought possible, it seemed ludicrous," he said.

"Like Running for a Week"

The long haul was documented during a study of godwit migration conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey and PRBO Conservation Science, a California-based nonprofit dedicated to bird research.

Some 70,000 godwits make the epic journey from their northern summer breeding grounds in Alaska down to New Zealand each September, before flying all the way back the following March.

To study this annual trek north, Battley and his colleagues fitted satellite transmitters to 16 godwits at two locations in New Zealand last summer.

Battley was amazed, he said, to find that one of the birds, dubbed E7, flew some 6,340 miles (10,200 kilometers) directly to a wetland on the North Korea-China border (see map).

After feeding and resting there, she continued another 3,000 miles (5,000 kilometers) to Alaska.

The flock's arrival in the U.S. was supposed to mark the end the study, but some of the tags' transmitters continued to send data, giving scientists the unexpected bonus of tracking the birds' return trip.

Scientists found that, on E7's way back south, with the help of tailwinds, she made the epic 7,145-mile (11,500-kilometer) flight to New Zealand uninterrupted.

"This organism is absolutely outstanding," said Rob Schuckard, a team leader at the Ornithological Society of New Zealand, which helped with the migration research.

"It's the equivalent of a human running at 70 kilometers an hour [43.5 miles an hour] for more then seven days."

According to satellite data, E7 flew at an average speed of 34.8 miles an hour (56 kilometers an hour), seeking favorable winds at elevations between 1.85 miles (3 kilometers) and 2.5 miles (4 kilometers).

Along the way, the bird "slept" by shutting down one side of her brain at a time and burned up the huge stores of fat—more than 50 percent of her body weight—that she had piled on in Alaska.

E7 found her way by analyzing polarized light to get a fix on the sun by day, even in heavy clouds, and by following the stars at night, Battley said.

"They learn the rotation of the sky when they're young," he explained.

"They can work out where north is, but presumably they have to learn a Southern Hemisphere compass as well. It's no good looking for the North Star in New Zealand."

An Uncertain Future

Despite the birds' hearty endurance, Schuckard fears for the godwits. The number of birds successfully reaching New Zealand each year has fallen sharply, he said, from around 155,000 in the mid-1990s to just 70,000 today.

"Something is seriously wrong," he said.

He suspects that widespread development along the Yellow Sea, which sits between China and North and South Korea, is depriving the birds of vital food sources, as mudflats and wetlands there are drained.

At one such site, the Saemangeum wetlands of South Korea, recognized as a crucial staging site for waders, a 20.5-mile (33-kilometer) seawall built last year has drained 154 square miles (400 square kilometres) of tidal flats.

"That's equal to the entire New Zealand estuarine habitat [where rivers meet the sea]," Schuckard said.

Battley agreed that godwits and other migrating waders face serious threats, as their feeding and resting grounds dwindle.

"Loss of habitat on the staging grounds is a real concern," he said. "The Yellow Sea is a particular problem, because virtually every godwit from New Zealand will go through there. If you look at South Korea, it's full of seawalls—they reclaim entire estuaries at a go."

Some mudflat loss has been offset by increased sediment loads dumped by China's Yellow and Yangtze rivers, he added.

"[But] the problem now is that with all the dams on those rivers, the Yellow River is running dry half the year, and the Three Gorges Dam is trapping most of the sediment that came down the Yangtze," Battley said.

(See a video about threats facing the giant Chinese sturgeon in the Yangtze River.)

"Shorebird migrants, through the Yellow Sea at least, have a very tough time coming up [north]," he said.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: alaska; bird; flight; nonstop
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To: Chili Girl
No one - even in their wildest dreams - could possibly think this bird evolved like this - now could they? What a feat!

I don't recall seeing the Godwit on the manifest of Noah's Ark.

What about this story makes you conclude that there was no natural selection going on in this bird's ancestry?

41 posted on 09/14/2007 5:44:20 PM PDT by corkoman
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To: steve86

Well, the vegitation here in AZ, for example, is pretty darn dry most of the time. They do get some moisture, but mostly it’s that hyper-metabolism they have where they eat like their body weight per day or something. Stored fat has not been metabolized yet and also has a high water content. I bet that helps.


42 posted on 09/14/2007 6:56:50 PM PDT by pianomikey (Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. -Reagan)
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To: corkoman

Gen 6:19 And of every living thing of all flesh, two of every [sort] shalt thou bring into the ark, to keep [them] alive with thee; they shall be male and female.

Gen 6:20 Of fowls after their kind, and of cattle after their kind, of every creeping thing of the earth after his kind, two of every [sort] shall come unto thee, to keep [them] alive.


43 posted on 09/14/2007 7:18:04 PM PDT by Bryan24 (When in doubt, move to the right..........)
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To: blam

Big deal. The bird sleeps for the next three weeks.


44 posted on 09/14/2007 7:41:09 PM PDT by Nachoman (My guns and my ammo, they comfort me.)
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To: DoughtyOne
Grrrrrrr... :->

You think you can throw a hanging curveball like that and not have someone on FR spank it? :^)

45 posted on 09/14/2007 7:43:44 PM PDT by dirtboy (Chertoff needs to move out of DC, not move to Justice.)
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To: dirtboy

Not this crew...

LOL


46 posted on 09/14/2007 9:07:29 PM PDT by DoughtyOne ((Victory will never be achieved while defining Conservatism downward, and forsaking its heritage.))
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To: blam
"It's the equivalent of a human running at 70 kilometers an hour [43.5 miles an hour] for more then seven days."

Only....it's nothing like that...at all.

47 posted on 09/14/2007 9:15:57 PM PDT by Psycho_Bunny
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To: RightWhale

29 feet? and you know that because they had to fly around the CB antenna on your Dodge?


48 posted on 09/14/2007 9:26:40 PM PDT by tubebender (My first great grandson is a Miniature Schnauzer...)
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To: tubebender

Yes, they flew between trees and below the cloud ceiling which was 30’. Their Vee formation was kind of ragged but at least they missed powerlines which even Blackhawks don’t always.


49 posted on 09/15/2007 7:33:40 AM PDT by RightWhale (Snow above 2000')
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To: DoughtyOne
Perhaps the most impressive altitude record is that of a flock of Whooper Swans which was seen on radar arriving over Northern Ireland on migration and was visually identified by an airline pilot at 29,000 feet. Birds can fly at altitudes that would be impossible for bats, since bird lungs can extract a larger fraction of oxygen from the air than can mammal lungs.

From the link at #1.

50 posted on 09/15/2007 7:43:16 AM PDT by reg45
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To: reg45

Thank you. I appreciate you pointing that out to me.


51 posted on 09/15/2007 9:05:09 AM PDT by DoughtyOne ((Victory will never be achieved while defining Conservatism downward, and forsaking its heritage.))
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To: Psycho_Bunny

“”It’s the equivalent of a human running at 70 kilometers an hour [43.5 miles an hour] for more then seven days.””

“Only....it’s nothing like that...at all.”

Lets see the bird try to do 43 mph in a Mercedes - now that would be something!


52 posted on 09/15/2007 2:45:38 PM PDT by spanalot
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To: All

That’s incredible. My first response, though, was could it do this while carrying a coconut? Or perhaps two Alaskan birds could carry it between them...


53 posted on 09/22/2007 12:16:44 PM PDT by MikeD (We live in a world where babies are like velveteen rabbits that only become real if they are loved.)
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