Wandering albatrosses rely
Home / Technology News / 2008 / March 2008 / March 9, 2008
Wandering albatrosses rely on their nose to find food

Top News

Karnataka High Court orders Ramoji Rao to appear in Ballari Court

BJP, Left and JD (S) condemn bomb blasts in Bangalore

No one has power to dissolve assemblies: Pak PM

Speed 2: Cruise Control voted as Worst Ever Sequel

Japan-US alliance should be expanded by including India, Australia

Kalmadi hopeful of India wining medals in tennis, boxing and shooting

Hubble finds largest sample of very distant galaxies seen to date

Adult stem cells finding provides foundation for brain injury cure

Wandering albatrosses rely on their nose to find food

A collaborated study led by American and French researchers has found that wandering albatrosses rely heavily on their sense of smell to find food.

Washington, Mar 9 : A collaborated study led by American and French researchers has found that wandering albatrosses rely heavily on their sense of smell to find food.

They found that the birds were capable to pick up the smell of food from several miles.

"This is the first time anyone has looked at the odour-tracking behaviour of individual birds in the wild using remote techniques," said Gabrielle Nevitt, study author and professor of neurobiology, physiology and behaviour at UC Davis.

For the study, the team fitted the Albatrosses in Possession Island in the South-western Indian Ocean with GPS receivers that traced their exact position every 10 seconds and stomach temperature gauges that noted every meal.

And when the birds returned to land after a foraging trip, they removed the equipment and downloaded the data.

The researchers found that the birds usually flew across the wind that allowed them to cross trails of scent drifting downwind.

The birds sometimes fly straight to food and almost half the time would either turn upwind or zigzag into the wind toward a meal.

According to the researchers, both the patterns implied that the birds were following a trail of scent, rather than visual cues.

Birds could turn upwind toward a food source several miles away and well over the visual horizon.

"Hunting by scent allows the albatross to cover a strip of ocean several miles wide as it flies crosswind," said Nevitt.

The study is published online by the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

ANI

July 25, 2008

July 24, 2008

July 23, 2008

July 22, 2008

July 21, 2008

July 20, 2008