Globetrotting Birds Migrate 40,000 Miles

By The Associated Press

posted: 08 August 2006 11:45 am ET

WASHINGTON (AP) _ Sooty shearwaters may not look like much, but when it comes to travel they put marathoners, cyclists and pretty much everyone else to shame.

Spotting Tips

Sooty shearwater, Puffinus griseus

• Length: 16 inches
• Wingspan: 43 inches
• Sexes similar
• Pelagic bird only coming ashore to breed
• Dark bill with tube on top
• Dark gray head, body and feet
• Pale underwings
• Rapid wingbeats
• Glides on stiff wings

Similar species:
Gulls are not as gray and flap their wings more slowly and smoothly and lack the tube on top of the bill. The gray morph of the Northern Fulmar is stockier and has a yellow bill. Flesh-footed Shearwater has pink legs and bill. Short-tailed Shearwater is very similar but is somewhat smaller with a steeper forehead.

SOURCE: USGS

These gray, 16-inch birds cover 40,000 miles annually in search of food, the longest migration ever recorded electronically, according to a report in this week's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Researchers led by Scott Shaffer of the University of California, Santa Cruz, tagged shearwaters to track their movements electronically.

The birds, which can have a wingspan of 43 inches, followed a figure-eight circuit over the Pacific Ocean. They ranged north to the Bering Sea, south to Antarctica, east to Chile, and west to Japan and New Zealand, covering over 40,000 miles in 200 days, the researchers said.

They said the long trip probably helps the birds take advantage of rich feeding grounds throughout the Pacific Ocean.

The research was funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Science Foundation and the Gordon and Betty Moore and David and Lucille Packard foundations.

Editor's Note: More about the research, including maps, is available here.

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