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Like an expert angler, a tern can read the surface of the water to find where to catch its next fish. Scientists piloted a drone to track the flight paths of terns on the hunt. The terns sought out turbulent water. A vortex formed by colliding currents traps fish near the surface, where terns can snap them up. Terns fly toward bubbly upwellings to see if the rising water brings prey animals along with it.
Birdnote ®
How Terns Read the Water
Written by Conor Gearin
This is BirdNote.
[wave sfx]
Looking out at the ocean, we might just see a chaos of waves and troughs. But, like an expert angler, a tern can read the surface of the water to find where to catch its next fish.
[Roseate Tern diving and calling, XC 593573, 0:16-0:18]
Researchers studying the feeding habits of terns piloted a drone to learn how the birds zero in on good fishing spots. By flying the drone at an altitude of 100 meters, well above the feeding terns, the scientists got a detailed look at the birds’ flight paths without disturbing them from the hunt.
The flight paths showed that the terns seek out turbulent water. They tend to dive for fish where colliding currents form a vortex. The swirling water traps small fish near the surface, the perfect place for terns to snatch them up.
[Roseate Tern diving and calling, XC 593573, 0:26-0:28]
When the terns spot new bubbly upwellings at a distance, they fly to them, as the rising currents can bring other prey animals along for the ride.
Using drones to observe airborne birds from a safe distance is helping reveal how they see the world. For the terns, the water’s surface isn’t just nice to look at — it’s a map to their next meal.
[Common Tern calls, ML 98873, 0:31-0:32]
For BirdNote, I’m Mary McCann.
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Senior Producer: Mark Bramhill
Producer: Sam Johnson
Managing Editor: Jazzi Johnson
Content Director: Jonese Franklin
Bird sounds provided by The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. Roseate Tern Xeno Canto 593573 recorded by S. Elliott, and Common Tern ML 98873 recorded by R. Grotke.
BirdNote’s theme was composed and played by Nancy Rumbel and John Kessler.
© 2021 BirdNote November 2021 December 2024 Narrator: Mary McCann
ID# tern-01-2021-11-11 tern-01
Reference: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2021.0592