by combined measurement of weight and
wingspan,
photograph Cristina Adan/Pixabay, weighing
up to about 16 kilograms and with a wingspan of roughly 3.3 meters, it is the Andean condor, (Vultur gryphus), what is even more amazing about this bird is that it can stay airborne for at least five hours and cover a
distance of over 100 miles without flapping its enormous wings once, this fact was discovered and published by researchers at the
University of Swansea after monitoring a group of condors for five years, between 2013 and 2018, biologist Emily Shepard and her team
monitored eight Andean condors near Bariloche, Argentina by attaching
flight-recorders capable of logging every single flap of the wings during the
birds’ flight. They aimed to study the effects of different weather conditions
on the condors’ flight, but they ended up learning something far more
surprising, in the most extreme example logged by the flight recorder, one of
the condors spent over five hours soaring through the air without once flapping
its wings, during which time it covered a distance of 106 miles or 172 km. Even
over mountains, where the condors have to mitigate complex airflow conditions,
they were able to navigate air currents with very little movement,
“The extraordinary low investment in flapping flight was seen
in all individuals, which is notable, as none were adult birds,” the
study authors wrote. “Therefore, even relatively inexperienced birds
operate for hours with a minimal need to flap.” researchers obtained more than 230 hours of flight data from
the eight tracked condors, and out of all that, only one percent of it was
spent flapping wings. Most of that one percent was during take-offs. Because of
their size and weight, it takes a lot of energy for condors to take off, but
once they become airborne they conserve their energy with maximum efficiency, “The finding that Andean condors basically almost never beat
their wings and just soar is mind-blowing,” David Lentink, an expert in bird
flight from Stanford University, told The Associated Press, over 100 miles without a wing beat, amazing!
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