BillionaireClubCollc
  • News
  • Notifications
  • Shop
  • Cart
  • Media
  • Advertise with Us
  • Profile
  • Groups
  • Games
  • My Story
  • Chat
  • Contact Us
home shop notifications more
Signin
  •  Profile
  •  Sign Out
Skip to content

Billionaire Club Co LLC

Believe It and You Will Achieve It

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Politics
  • TSR
  • Anime
  • Michael Jordan vs.Lebron James
  • Crypto
  • Soccer
  • Dating
  • Airplanes
  • Forex
  • Tax
  • New Movies Coming Soon
  • Games
  • CRYPTO INSURANCE
  • Sport
  • MEMES
  • K-POP
  • AI
  • The Bahamas
  • Digital NoMad
  • Joke of the Day
  • RapVerse
  • Stocks
  • SPORTS BETTING
  • Glamour
  • Beauty
  • Travel
  • Celebrity Net Worth
  • TMZ
  • Lotto
  • COVD-19
  • Fitness
  • The Bible is REAL
  • OutDoor Activity
  • Lifestyle
  • Culture
  • Boxing
  • Food
  • LGBTQ
  • Poetry
  • Music
  • Misc
  • Open Source
  • NASA
  • Science
  • Natural & Holstict Med
  • Gardening
  • DYI
  • History
  • Art
  • Education
  • Pets
  • Aliens
  • Astrology
  • Farming and LiveStock
  • LAW
  • Fast & Furious
  • Fishing & Hunting
  • Health
  • Credit Repair
  • Grants
  • All things legal
  • Reality TV
  • Africa Today
  • China Today
  • "DUMB SHIT.."
  • Poetry

Birds of Two Feathers Flock Together

When dusk falls, the daytime birds find a well-hidden roosting site, perhaps deep within a thicket, for at night they are at their most vulnerable. They remain motionless and silent until the morning if they survive the attentions of the night hunters. It must be a powerful urge, then, that sends hundreds of millions of birds into the night sky to migrate south every fall, more powerful than their natural fear of the night. Many of these birds are juveniles, striking out on their own, into the unknown, on their first great journey.
I’ve often wondered what it must be like for these youngsters, obeying the urge to launch alone into the night sky. I imagine they feel something akin to terror. I recently had my thinking changed, however, when I read new research that suggests migration is more of a communal affair, where different species form “migrating communities.”
Joely DeSimone, researcher at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, thought that with so many birds in the air together, there must be some kind of interaction going on. It’s well-known that birds call frequently at night during migration. Indeed, if you step outside at night during the next couple of months, you might hear the faint calls of birds passing overhead.
DeSimone had the idea of looking at data from banding stations, where birds are caught in nets, measured, cataloged, fitted with a band, and quickly set free. Banding stations are located at known gathering sites for migrating birds, so it made sense to see if there was data to show that migrating birds were moving together.
The researchers gathered more than half a million records from five stations across eastern North America. After much statistical analysis, lo and behold, the data proved that birds have their own “interspecies social networks.” These networks held true across all the banding stations.
DeSimone had surmised that birds with similar dietary needs would avoid one another to cut down on the competition for scarce resources; they were surprised, then, when they discovered the opposite to be true. Nashville warblers and Tennessee warblers, both tiny green-and-yellow birds that have essentially the same diet, often travel together during migration. Another example of interspecies traveling buddies involves the American redstart and magnolia warbler.

Tennessee warblers, shown, team up with Nashville warblers during migration | Photo: Hugh Ranson

The researchers conjecture that one possible benefit that such companionship could bring is that, because of the birds’ similarities, they can help each other discover prime feeding habitat.
Whether these “social networks” are formed at night as the birds are on the move, or when the birds have landed and are actively seeking food, is still unknown. I’d like to think that it’s the former, and that the birds have some company as they journey in darkness, especially for the youngsters who are striking out for the first time.

Magnolia warbler | Photo: Hugh RansonAn American redstart, which often has a magnolia warbler as a traveling companion | Photo: Hugh Ranson

The next Santa Barbara Audubon Society program will be Why Are Some Birds So Colorful? The Evolution of Avian Ornamentation, presented by Steven Gaulin. Gaulin is a Professor of Anthropology at UCSB and an avid birder. The talk will take place on Tuesday, September 17, at 7 p.m. at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History’s Fleischmann Auditorium (2559 Puesta del Sol). It will focus on why flamboyant colors and traits are especially conspicuous in many species of birds and the connection of such ornamentation to sexual selection. The event is free and is open to the general public.
Hugh Ranson is a member of Santa Barbara Audubon Society, a nonprofit organization that protects area birdlife and habitat and connects people with birds through education, conservation, and science. For more information, see santabarbaraaudubon.org.

Related Posts

Avian Adventures in the Deep Blue Sea
By Story and Photos by Hugh Ranson, Member of the Santa Barbara Audubon Society | Sun Aug 18, 2024

From Dingle to Donegal
By Hugh Ranson, Member of the Santa Barbara Audubon Society | Thu Jun 13, 2024

The Meteor with Needle Bill
By Hugh Ranson, Member of the Santa Barbara Audubon Society | Thu May 16, 2024

Most Read

Recent News

Santa Barbara County Folds to Sable
By Margaux Lovely | Wed Sep 04, 2024

Santa Barbara’s State Route 192 to Be Closed for Five Weeks Starting September 16
By Jean Yamamura | Wed Sep 04, 2024

Armed Suspect Taken into Custody After Hours-Long Standoff at Old Town Goleta Apartment
By Callie Fausey | Sat Aug 31, 2024

Arnoldi’s Back in Business Under New Owner
By Nick Welsh | Tue Sep 03, 2024

The End of Platform Holly
By Margaux Lovely | Tue Sep 03, 2024

Review | In the Presence of Legends: Reliving the Glory Days with Steve Miller Band, Journey, and Def Leppard
By Nataschia Hadley | Fri Sep 06, 2024

Mysticism in the ‘Burbs
By Josef Woodard | Fri Sep 06, 2024

The Emotional Layers of Dementia Take Center Stage in ‘The Father’
By Maggie Yates | Fri Sep 06, 2024

Country Star with Artistic Spurs
By Josef Woodard | Fri Sep 06, 2024

Professors, Poets, and Me
By Meaghan Clark Tiernan | Fri Sep 06, 2024

Premier Events

Sat, Sep 07
7:00 PM

Santa Barbara

Voracious Records Presents JOVETH single release p

Fri, Sep 06
5:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Environmental Defense Center’s TGIF!s

Sat, Sep 07
4:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Classical Music of India, Math Behind the Sound

Sat, Sep 07
6:00 PM

Santa Barbara

4xSB Presents: The Idiomatiques & Nightbirds

Wed, Sep 11
5:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Sewing and Mending Club

Wed, Oct 02
12:00 PM

Santa Barbara

“Project Fiesta!” Celebrates 100 Years of Fiesta

Wed, Oct 09
5:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Sewing and Mending Club

Sat, Oct 12
8:00 PM

Santa Barbara

Star Party at the SBMNH

See Full Event Calendar

The post Birds of Two Feathers Flock Together appeared first on The Santa Barbara Independent.

Welcome to Billionaire Club Co LLC, your gateway to a brand-new social media experience! Sign up today and dive into over 10,000 fresh daily articles and videos curated just for your enjoyment. Enjoy the ad free experience, unlimited content interactions, and get that coveted blue check verification—all for just $1 a month!

Source link

Share
What's your thought on the article, write a comment
0 Comments
×

Sign In to perform this Activity

Sign in
×

Account Frozen

Your account is frozen. You can still view content but cannot interact with it.

Please go to your settings to update your account status.

Open Profile Settings

Ads

  • Billionaire128 Liquid Gold Backpack

    $ 44.50
  • Billionaire128 Liquid Gold Yoga Shorts

    $ 30.50
  • Billionaire128 Liquid Gold Laptop Sleeve

    $ 28.00
  • News Social

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    Copyright © 2024 Billionaire Club Co LLC. All rights reserved