Excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.

Devices attached to flying birds can hugely enhance our understanding of their behavioural ecology for periods when they cannot be observed directly. For this, scientists routinely attach units to either birds' backs or their tails. However, inappropriate payload distribution is critical in air...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sylvie P Vandenabeele, Edward Grundy, Michael I Friswell, Adam Grogan, Stephen C Votier, Rory P Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3966804?pdf=render
id doaj-a8171ea8016746448234c4fc5fc24f1f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a8171ea8016746448234c4fc5fc24f1f2020-11-25T01:44:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0193e9265710.1371/journal.pone.0092657Excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.Sylvie P VandenabeeleEdward GrundyMichael I FriswellAdam GroganStephen C VotierRory P WilsonDevices attached to flying birds can hugely enhance our understanding of their behavioural ecology for periods when they cannot be observed directly. For this, scientists routinely attach units to either birds' backs or their tails. However, inappropriate payload distribution is critical in aircraft and, since birds and planes are subject to the same laws of physics during flight, we considered aircraft aerodynamic constraints to explain flight patterns displayed by northern gannets Sula bassana equipped with (small ca. 14 g) tail- and back-mounted accelerometers and (larger ca. 30 g) tail-mounted GPS units. Tail-mounted GPS-fitted birds showed significantly higher cumulative numbers of flap-glide cycles and a higher pitch angle of the tail than accelerometer-equipped birds, indicating problems with balancing inappropriately placed weights with knock-on consequences relating to energy expenditure. These problems can be addressed by carefully choosing where to place tags on birds according to the mass of the tags and the lifestyle of the subject species.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3966804?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sylvie P Vandenabeele
Edward Grundy
Michael I Friswell
Adam Grogan
Stephen C Votier
Rory P Wilson
spellingShingle Sylvie P Vandenabeele
Edward Grundy
Michael I Friswell
Adam Grogan
Stephen C Votier
Rory P Wilson
Excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sylvie P Vandenabeele
Edward Grundy
Michael I Friswell
Adam Grogan
Stephen C Votier
Rory P Wilson
author_sort Sylvie P Vandenabeele
title Excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.
title_short Excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.
title_full Excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.
title_fullStr Excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.
title_full_unstemmed Excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.
title_sort excess baggage for birds: inappropriate placement of tags on gannets changes flight patterns.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Devices attached to flying birds can hugely enhance our understanding of their behavioural ecology for periods when they cannot be observed directly. For this, scientists routinely attach units to either birds' backs or their tails. However, inappropriate payload distribution is critical in aircraft and, since birds and planes are subject to the same laws of physics during flight, we considered aircraft aerodynamic constraints to explain flight patterns displayed by northern gannets Sula bassana equipped with (small ca. 14 g) tail- and back-mounted accelerometers and (larger ca. 30 g) tail-mounted GPS units. Tail-mounted GPS-fitted birds showed significantly higher cumulative numbers of flap-glide cycles and a higher pitch angle of the tail than accelerometer-equipped birds, indicating problems with balancing inappropriately placed weights with knock-on consequences relating to energy expenditure. These problems can be addressed by carefully choosing where to place tags on birds according to the mass of the tags and the lifestyle of the subject species.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3966804?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT sylviepvandenabeele excessbaggageforbirdsinappropriateplacementoftagsongannetschangesflightpatterns
AT edwardgrundy excessbaggageforbirdsinappropriateplacementoftagsongannetschangesflightpatterns
AT michaelifriswell excessbaggageforbirdsinappropriateplacementoftagsongannetschangesflightpatterns
AT adamgrogan excessbaggageforbirdsinappropriateplacementoftagsongannetschangesflightpatterns
AT stephencvotier excessbaggageforbirdsinappropriateplacementoftagsongannetschangesflightpatterns
AT rorypwilson excessbaggageforbirdsinappropriateplacementoftagsongannetschangesflightpatterns
_version_ 1725028354879389696