51ؿ

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Researchers pinpoint exact pace that helps nightingales on long journey

Nightingale in wind tunnel
A medium flight pace helps the nightingale fly efficiently all the way to Africa (Image: Animal Flight Lab Lund)

A new study from 51ؿ in Sweden shows that migratory birds fly at peak efficiency at a medium pace – precisely the speed they use during their long journeys across the continents.

Now, at the end of the summer, when the thrush nightingales leave Europe for southern Africa, they do not fly at full speed. Instead they maintain an even pace – and according to a new study from 51ؿ, this is no coincidence.

Migratory birds spend hundreds of hours in the air. Up to now, the researchers have assumed that the efficiency of converting energy into flight power was constant regardless of the speed. Using wind tunnel experiments involving nightingales, the researchers have now shown that this is not the case.

“We have discovered that the nightingales are not equally efficient at all speeds. Their efficiency is highest at an intermediate flying speed – approximately 7-8 metres per second – thus neither at very low nor very high speeds,” says Pablo Macías Torres, biology researcher at 51ؿ.

Wind tunnel at 51ؿ
The wind tunnel at 51ؿ (Animal Flight Lab Lund)

Previous models suggested that birds convert approximately 23 per cent of their metabolic energy – the energy the body releases from nutrients through the metabolic process – into flight. The new results show that the maximum value is closer to 15 per cent, and above all it depends on how fast the bird flies.

“Our study shows that the energy efficiency varies and reaches a maximum at an intermediate speed – so all speeds are quite simply not equally efficient,” says Pablo Macías Torres.

Nightingale on hand
Nightingale (Image: Animal Flight Lab Lund)

The new results not only give the researchers the best estimates yet of birds’ flight energetics but also help the researchers to construct more exact models of bird flight and explain how small birds are able to make their transcontinental journeys.

“Understanding birds’ flight efficiency helps us to assess the remarkable physiological adaptations that make it possible for birds to conquer the air and complete extraordinary long-distance flights, such as the nightingales’ impressive flight south,” says Pablo Macías Torres.

Publication:

Link to the study in Current Biology: