Optimization of dynamic soaring in a flap-gliding seabird affects its large-scale distribution at sea

James A. Kempton(University of Oxford), Joe Wynn(University of Oxford), Sarah Bond(Bangor University), James Evry(University of Oxford), Annette L. Fayet(University of Oxford), Natasha Gillies(University of Oxford), Tim Guilford(University of Oxford), Marwa M. Kavelaars(University of Antwerp), Ignacio Juarez-Martinez(University of Oxford), Oliver Padget(University of Oxford), Christian Rutz(University of St Andrews), Akiko Shoji(University of Tsukuba), Martyna Syposz(University of Oxford), Graham K. Taylor(University of Oxford)
Science Advances
June 1, 2022
Cited by 42Open Access
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Abstract

Dynamic soaring harvests energy from a spatiotemporal wind gradient, allowing albatrosses to glide over vast distances. However, its use is challenging to demonstrate empirically and has yet to be confirmed in other seabirds. Here, we investigate how flap-gliding Manx shearwaters optimize their flight for dynamic soaring. We do so by deriving a new metric, the horizontal wind effectiveness, that quantifies how effectively flight harvests energy from a shear layer. We evaluate this metric empirically for fine-scale trajectories reconstructed from bird-borne video data using a simplified flight dynamics model. We find that the birds' undulations are phased with their horizontal turning to optimize energy harvesting. We also assess the opportunity for energy harvesting in long-range, GPS-logged foraging trajectories and find that Manx shearwaters optimize their flight to increase the opportunity for dynamic soaring during favorable wind conditions. Our results show how small-scale dynamic soaring affects large-scale Manx shearwater distribution at sea.


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