Western Mail

No-flap condor soars 100 miles with wind beneath its wings

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THE world’s heaviest soaring bird beats its wings just 1% of the time during flight – and can go more than 100 miles between flaps, researcher­s have found.

The Andean condor, which weighs up to 15kg, uses air currents to stay airborne for hours at a time.

Flight recorders found one bird flew for five hours without flapping over about 172km (107 miles).

The study is part of a collaborat­ion between Swansea University’s Prof Emily Shepard and Dr Sergio Lambertucc­i in Argentina.

They wanted to find out more about how birds’ flight efforts vary depending on environmen­tal conditions.

Published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, the study found 75% of the birds’ flapping was associated with take-off.

Prof Shepard said the research showed “just how flexible their soaring strategies are”.

“Human glider pilots can soar all day if the conditions are right, so in some senses the condor’s performanc­e may not seem surprising,” she said. “But glider pilots look at the weather and decide whether or not it is good for flying.

“Condors probably do this to a certain extent but at some point they will get hungry, and they need to fly to find food.

“They feed on carcasses, but these don’t necessaril­y appear in places that are ideal for condors to fly to.

“So we were expecting that they might encounter some tricky conditions – or at least conditions that make them flap – in the search for food.” Dr Lambertucc­i said birds needed to find rising air to “avoid an unplanned landing”.

“These risks are higher when moving between thermal updrafts,” he said. “Thermals can behave like lava lamps, with bubbles of air rising intermitte­ntly from the ground when the air is warm enough.”

 ??  ?? > An Andean condor in flight
> An Andean condor in flight

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