Sep 22, 2022
Thought Question: What's the hardest thing you've ever done? How did you prepare to tackle that challenge?
Meet the bar-tailed godwit, nature’s most unflappable flapper. A bird of many qualities, the godwit has a long beak, stilt-like legs, and specialized wings. Those wings will be put to the test this month as 90,000 bar-tailed godwits make their yearly, record-long migration from Alaska to New Zealand.
Bar-tailed godwits fly an average of 7,000 miles every fall as they seek warmer weather in the South Pacific. It’s the longest migration of any land-based bird. Only a few types of seabirds fly farther. Godwits do not stop to eat or sleep, either. They remain in the air for over a week. And unlike other birds who rest by gliding, godwits never stop flapping their wings.
“I tell people try exercising for nine straight days — not stopping, not eating, not drinking,” a biologist told The New York Times. “It stretches the imagination.”
To manage the long flight, Godwits do a fair amount of their own stretching. They eat enough insects, worms, and clams in the summer to double their weight. That fattens them up with enough fuel to power their wings. Before leaving, they will also shrink their internal organs and expand their flight muscles. This has led some biologists to call them “obese super-athletes.”
“The more I learn, the more amazing I find them,” said Dr. Theunis Piersma, an expert in migratory birds. “They are a total evolutionary success.”
Photo from Public Domain courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
Bird's Eye View Lesson Plan
This is an activity-based lesson plan through which students get to collect and observe air pollution samples to explore how pollution affects our daily lives.
"Te waha o Tane" (Call of Nature)
This mural by Japanese artist Twoone depicts a group of endangered New Zealand seabirds, called Chatham Island Shags.
Migrations in Motion
This interactive map illustrates the possible migration movements of mammals, birds, and amphibians due to climate change.