Vietnam.vn - Nền tảng quảng bá Việt Nam

Birds can fly for 5 hours without flapping their wings.

VnExpressVnExpress05/04/2024


Despite its massive body, the Andean condor holds the record for the longest flight powered solely by air currents, without flapping its wings, for 5 hours.

The Andean condor is an expert at soaring in the air. Photo: Lautaro Vidal

The Andean condor is an expert at soaring in the sky. Photo: Lautaro Vidal

Birds can fly through the sky without much effort by hovering without flapping their wings. So which bird can maintain this state the longest? That title belongs to a giant creature in the Andes: the Andean condor ( Vultur gryphus ). They are truly enormous, weighing up to 15 kg, making them the heaviest gliding bird in the world .

Such a heavy creature might seem like it would have a hard time getting airborne, but the Andean condor has a wingspan of up to 10 feet. Their weight is part of the reason they soar. With their massive bodies, flapping their wings a lot would cost them a lot of energy. Instead, the Andean condor uses thermal air currents to move through the air.

In a 2020 study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , a team from Swansea University and Comahue National University reported tracking eight Andean condors for five years. They fitted them with GPS devices and wingbeat recorders. From this data, they discovered that they flapped their wings for just 1% of their flight time. This means they took the title from the Diomedea exulans , which spends 1.2% to 14.5% of its flight time slowly flapping its wings.

Like the albatross, the Andean condors studied spent the majority of their wing time flapping at takeoff, more than 75%. The rest of the time, they avoided flapping, taking full advantage of wind and air currents. One of the birds studied even flew for five hours without flapping its wings, covering a distance of 172 km.

Weather did not seem to have much of an impact on Andean condor flapping. “This suggests that decisions about when and where to land are important, as not only do Andean condors need to take off again, but unnecessary landings add significantly to the ‘cost’ of flight,” explains study author Dr Hannah Williams of Swansea University.

It seems that it is not just old birds that can make such decisions, as all the birds in the study were juveniles. “Our results demonstrate that even inexperienced birds can fly long distances over land without flapping their wings,” the researchers write.

Thu Thao (According to IFL Science )



Source link

Tag: birds

Comment (0)

No data
No data

Same tag

Same category

The beauty of Ha Long Bay has been recognized as a heritage site by UNESCO three times.
Lost in cloud hunting in Ta Xua
There is a hill of purple Sim flowers in the sky of Son La
Lantern - A Mid-Autumn Festival gift in memory

Same author

Heritage

;

Figure

;

Enterprise

;

No videos available

News

;

Political System

;

Destination

;

Product

;