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Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects

Flight speed is expected to increase with mass and wing loading among flying animals and aircraft for fundamental aerodynamic reasons. Assuming geometrical and dynamical similarity, cruising flight speed is predicted to vary as (body mass)(1/6) and (wing loading)(1/2) among bird species. To test the...

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Autores principales: Alerstam, Thomas, Rosén, Mikael, Bäckman, Johan, Ericson, Per G. P, Hellgren, Olof
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1914071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17645390
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050197
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author Alerstam, Thomas
Rosén, Mikael
Bäckman, Johan
Ericson, Per G. P
Hellgren, Olof
author_facet Alerstam, Thomas
Rosén, Mikael
Bäckman, Johan
Ericson, Per G. P
Hellgren, Olof
author_sort Alerstam, Thomas
collection PubMed
description Flight speed is expected to increase with mass and wing loading among flying animals and aircraft for fundamental aerodynamic reasons. Assuming geometrical and dynamical similarity, cruising flight speed is predicted to vary as (body mass)(1/6) and (wing loading)(1/2) among bird species. To test these scaling rules and the general importance of mass and wing loading for bird flight speeds, we used tracking radar to measure flapping flight speeds of individuals or flocks of migrating birds visually identified to species as well as their altitude and winds at the altitudes where the birds were flying. Equivalent airspeeds (airspeeds corrected to sea level air density, U (e)) of 138 species, ranging 0.01–10 kg in mass, were analysed in relation to biometry and phylogeny. Scaling exponents in relation to mass and wing loading were significantly smaller than predicted (about 0.12 and 0.32, respectively, with similar results for analyses based on species and independent phylogenetic contrasts). These low scaling exponents may be the result of evolutionary restrictions on bird flight-speed range, counteracting too slow flight speeds among species with low wing loading and too fast speeds among species with high wing loading. This compression of speed range is partly attained through geometric differences, with aspect ratio showing a positive relationship with body mass and wing loading, but additional factors are required to fully explain the small scaling exponent of U (e) in relation to wing loading. Furthermore, mass and wing loading accounted for only a limited proportion of the variation in U (e). Phylogeny was a powerful factor, in combination with wing loading, to account for the variation in U (e). These results demonstrate that functional flight adaptations and constraints associated with different evolutionary lineages have an important influence on cruising flapping flight speed that goes beyond the general aerodynamic scaling effects of mass and wing loading.
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spelling pubmed-19140712007-08-14 Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects Alerstam, Thomas Rosén, Mikael Bäckman, Johan Ericson, Per G. P Hellgren, Olof PLoS Biol Research Article Flight speed is expected to increase with mass and wing loading among flying animals and aircraft for fundamental aerodynamic reasons. Assuming geometrical and dynamical similarity, cruising flight speed is predicted to vary as (body mass)(1/6) and (wing loading)(1/2) among bird species. To test these scaling rules and the general importance of mass and wing loading for bird flight speeds, we used tracking radar to measure flapping flight speeds of individuals or flocks of migrating birds visually identified to species as well as their altitude and winds at the altitudes where the birds were flying. Equivalent airspeeds (airspeeds corrected to sea level air density, U (e)) of 138 species, ranging 0.01–10 kg in mass, were analysed in relation to biometry and phylogeny. Scaling exponents in relation to mass and wing loading were significantly smaller than predicted (about 0.12 and 0.32, respectively, with similar results for analyses based on species and independent phylogenetic contrasts). These low scaling exponents may be the result of evolutionary restrictions on bird flight-speed range, counteracting too slow flight speeds among species with low wing loading and too fast speeds among species with high wing loading. This compression of speed range is partly attained through geometric differences, with aspect ratio showing a positive relationship with body mass and wing loading, but additional factors are required to fully explain the small scaling exponent of U (e) in relation to wing loading. Furthermore, mass and wing loading accounted for only a limited proportion of the variation in U (e). Phylogeny was a powerful factor, in combination with wing loading, to account for the variation in U (e). These results demonstrate that functional flight adaptations and constraints associated with different evolutionary lineages have an important influence on cruising flapping flight speed that goes beyond the general aerodynamic scaling effects of mass and wing loading. Public Library of Science 2007-08 2007-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC1914071/ /pubmed/17645390 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050197 Text en © 2007 Alerstam et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Alerstam, Thomas
Rosén, Mikael
Bäckman, Johan
Ericson, Per G. P
Hellgren, Olof
Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects
title Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects
title_full Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects
title_fullStr Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects
title_full_unstemmed Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects
title_short Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects
title_sort flight speeds among bird species: allometric and phylogenetic effects
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1914071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17645390
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050197
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