Hummingbirds’ Ability to Navigate Narrow Spaces with Their Wings

Hummingbirds’ Ability to Navigate Narrow Spaces with Their Wings



Hummingbirds are natural acrobats, twisting their wings in ways that let them⁢ fly backward and‌ upside down, unlike any other bird (SN: 1/13/16). New high-speed video now⁣ shows how, using a⁢ bit of aerial gymnastics, ​hummingbirds can also slip through ⁤gaps‍ narrower than their wingspan.
Anna’s hummingbirds (Calypte anna) fly sideways⁣ to make⁢ it through holes too small for their rigid wings, researchers⁤ report November⁤ 9 in Journal of Experimental Biology. To avoid hitting a hole’s⁤ sides, the birds also flutter⁢ their wings while flying through a ⁣tight space ⁣rather than using ⁤their ⁤full range of‌ motion for each wingbeat. ​After successfully navigating the obstacle a few times, the birds switch‌ it up, flattening their wings against their bodies and shooting through ⁢holes like a bullet.
“This is a new insight into the amazing ​capacity of ‍hummingbirds,” says Bret Tobalske, ‍a​ biomechanist at the University⁤ of Montana in Missoula ⁤who wasn’t involved ‍with the research. Sideways flight to maneuver through gaps is “pretty⁣ remarkable” and highlights how unique hummingbirds are among birds, he says.
The findings could help engineers develop aerial ‌vehicles or robots suitable for navigating tight, complicated spaces. ⁣Hummingbirds are among nature’s best‍ fliers and are ‌fantastic at remembering their ‌spatial environment, says Bo Cheng,⁢ a mechanical engineer at Penn State not involved in the study. But “the state ‍of the art in drones hasn’t really⁣ reached the hummingbird-level flight capability yet,” he says. The rapid beat‍ of ‍hummingbird wings — around 40 beats per second for an⁢ Anna’s ⁣hummingbird — gives the birds precise control over‍ flight, ⁤and engineering needs to catch up.

2023-11-09 18:00:00
Original‌ from www.sciencenews.org

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