Pages

Tuesday, 21 April 2015

11 AMAZINGLY LONG ANIMAL MIGRATIONS


wpsE04A.tmp
11 Amazingly Long Animal Migrations
By Caitlin Schneider,
Mental Floss, 20 April 2015.

These creatures walk, swim, or fly in record-setting fashion.

1. Grey whales

wps41F9.tmpCredit: Merrill Gosho/Wikimedia Commons

In early April, a team of marine biologists recorded the longest mammal migration in history. The discovery was made by tracking seven Pacific grey whales, a gravely endangered species about which little is known. Only three of the seven tags lasted long enough for scientists to track, but that was enough to yield incredible findings. A 9-year-old female dubbed Varvara swam across the Pacific Ocean, from Sakhalin Island in Russia to Baja, Mexico, and back. That’s a 14,000-mile journey over a relatively quick 172 days.

2. Humpback whales

wpsF6A5.tmp
Credit: Zorankovacevic/Wikimedia Commons

These guys are also known to really go the distance. The annual migration is more than 5000 miles, swimming at speeds between 3 and 9 mph. After that, a vacation is pretty well deserved. Props to the elephant seal as well, another marine mammal that travels thousands of miles annually on not one, but two migratory trips.

3. Birds

wps7DE7.tmp
Credit: Malene Thyssen/Wikimedia Commons

Whales are top dog in the mammal migration world, but they’ve got nothing on birds. The arctic tern (above) - a small white seabird with a black head and orange beak - jets back and forth between Greenland and Antarctica, traveling about 44,000 miles in the process. It’s not a bad deal for the tiny fliers - the travel gets them two summers a year and more daylight than any other animal on earth.

Sooty shearwaters also log an impressive amount of miles (just over 40,000). And let’s not forget the 4000 other bird species that regularly migrate. After all, birds gotta fly.

4. Leatherback Sea Turtles

wps2C39.tmp
Credit: Claudia Lombard/USFWS

Sea turtles are known for their longevity, but they also do a lot of moving around during their many years on the planet. Leatherback turtles in particular travel more than 10,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean annually and are able to find their way back to the very beach where they were born in order to continue the circle of life.

5. Salmon

wps342A.tmp
Credit: Marvina Munch/USFWS

Salmon get migration points for their sheer determination. They’re born in freshwater, but eventually make their way to the sea where they live until it’s time to reproduce. Like turtles, the salmon travel back to the place they were born in order to spawn - except for them, it’s an exceedingly arduous process. The only way to get back upstream is to swim…upstream. The fish fight their way through seawater and freshwater and navigate various channels just to get there. Was that a little too “When I was your age?” Well, after they travel those thousands of miles, using the earth’s magnetic field to find their natal stream, they do their part to continue the species and then they die. So you know, they’re allowed to vent.

6. Caribou

wps57F4.tmp
Credit: Dean Biggins/Wikimedia Commons

Of the land-bound mammals, the North American caribou (a.k.a. reindeer) is surprisingly the most mobile, traveling up to 3000 miles every year during migration. The herds travel north in the summer to feast on the blossoming tundra and turn back when the snow returns in the winter.

7. Wildebeest

wpsFAAD.tmp
Credit: Bjørn Christian Tørrissen/Wikimedia Commons

In Africa, migrating wildebeest know there’s strength in numbers. They travel close to 1000 miles in a herd of millions along with hundreds of thousands of zebra and gazelles as part of the largest mammal migration in the world. Their journey offers a sight unlike any other, as the crowd makes its way across the plains following a trail of phosphorous-rich grass (7000 tons are consumed by the time it’s all over) on their way to rainier, richer pastures in the north.

8. Dragonflies

wps6927.tmp
Credit: Steven/Flickr

Dragonflies embark on the longest of all insect migration paths, though scientists know almost nothing about why, how, or where they’re migrating to. In 2009, scientist Charles Anderson observed that dragonflies were soaring from India to Africa and back, a journey that takes more than a couple generations of dragonflies. The wandering gliders were following the monsoon rains, traveling around 10,000 miles in all. Only some species of the insect voyage in such epic fashion, and naturalists are keeping an eye to sky, trying to piece together the mystery of their migration patterns.

9. Monarch butterflies

wps4929.tmp
Credit: Loadmaster/Wikimedia Commons

If not the record-holder for distance in the migrating insect world, monarchs can at least claim the title of most beautiful. Swarms of the orange-winged gliders travel south for the winter, just like birds. The eastern population of North American monarchs travels upwards of 3000 miles, using air currents and earth’s magnetic field to guide them as far as Mexico.

10. Zooplankton

wps4CDF.tmp
Credit: Uwe Kils/Wikimedia Commons

These surface-dwellers are drifters in nature, but they put some pep in their step as the sun rises and sets. Theirs is called diel vertical migration, which is an up-and-down pattern of movement. During the day, zooplankton hang in the deep water to avoid predators. At night, they pop up to feed on the phytoplanktons that need sunlight to photosynthesize.

11. Christmas Island Crabs

wpsD932.tmp
Image via Discovery Zone

On this island north of Australia in the Indian Ocean, 120 million red crabs migrate annually in a mass movement that yields some incredible visuals. The land crabs aren’t returning to their birthplace, per se, but to the place they once resided in a prior state in the evolutionary process - the ocean. Each year between October and December, the crabs emerge from their rainforest homes and trek across the island in a massive horde. A million are crushed every year by cars and trains, but those casualties are minor in the scheme of things. At the ocean, the males dig the burrows; after mating, the females stay in the burrows for up to 13 days, waiting for theirs eggs to develop. When it's time, the females step into the surf; the eggs hatch immediately upon contact with the water and the larvae are swept out to sea. After a month, they emerge as tiny crabs, making their way across the island and back to the rainforest.

Top image: Aerial view of wildebeest migration in Masai Mara, Kenya. Credit: T. R. Shankar Raman/Wikimedia Commons.

[Source: Mental Floss. Edited. Some images added.]

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please adhere to proper blog etiquette when posting your comments. This blog owner will exercise his absolution discretion in allowing or rejecting any comments that are deemed seditious, defamatory, libelous, racist, vulgar, insulting, and other remarks that exhibit similar characteristics. If you insist on using anonymous comments, please write your name or other IDs at the end of your message.