Birds migrate together at night in dispersed flocks

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Ronald Larkin and his colleagues used a Korean War-era low-power-density tracking radar to detect and record the discrete flight details of two birds at a time. Wherever the bird flies the radar points at it he said. Credit: Photo by L. Brian Stauffe ...
Ronald Larkin and his colleagues used a Korean War-era low-power-density tracking radar to detect and record the discrete flight details of two birds at a time. "Wherever the bird flies, the radar points at it," he said. Credit: Photo by L. Brian Stauffer, U. of I. News Bureau

A new analysis indicates that birds don't fly alone when migrating at night. Some birds, at least, keep together on their migratory journeys, flying in tandem even when they are 200 meters or more apart.


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