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Flight in Flocks: Surfing in the wake of other birds?

ORAL

Abstract

Group flight in a V-formation is a means to improve energy efficiency. But is this also the case for flight in bird flocks or is flocking only beneficial for protection against predators and for foraging strategies? Here we quantify the metabolic and aerodynamic costs/benefit of bird flight in vortex wakes, using wind tunnel flight tests with European Starlings, known for flocking in huge numbers. Birds are tested in a wind tunnel, flying either solo or with one or more companion birds. We fly the birds either in a clean flow or in the wake of an actuated airfoil. The birds' responses are measured using (i) a camera system to record wing kinematics and preferred flight position, (ii) a lightweight inertial measurement unit (IMU) to record body motion, and (iii) the 13C-labelled sodium bicarbonate method (NaBi) to record the metabolic cost of flight. By combining kinematics, metabolic and aerodynamic results, we formalize and test hypothesized predictive relationships between wake structure, flight behavior and metabolic energy expenditure. We find that the starlings' mean relative locations in flights with a companion bird align as in V-formation flight with a lateral offset of around ½ wingspan. This suggests that they can benefit from the wingtip vortex of the leading bird.

Presenters

  • Kenny Breuer

    Brown University, Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University

Authors

  • Sonja I Friman

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Siyang Hao

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University, Brown University

  • Cory Elowe

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Laura X Mendez

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Raul Ayala

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University

  • Caylan N Hagood

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Dayna Jackson

    Howard Univsersity, Howard University

  • Gabriella Orfanides

    Rochester Institute of Technology

  • Evrim Ozcan

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University

  • Jared Ramirez

    University of Southern California

  • Ian Brown

    Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University

  • Alexander Gerson

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Tyson L Hedrick

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Kenny Breuer

    Brown University, Center for Fluid Mechanics, Brown University