Two kestrels, a male and a female, were trained to fly over 50 and 125 m in a windless corridor. Both distances were flown with or without dead weights attached to the feet during 13 flight sessions for each bird. Added weight was either 0.3 N (31 g lead) or 0.6 N (61 g). Each session was devoted to one distance and one flight weight category. Flight duration was automatically recorded at the landing points and at four positions along the track. Gliding bouts were hand-clocked and flight altitudes were estimated with the aid of sidewall markings. An analysis was made of 1226 flights by the female over a total of 100 km, and 1017 flights by the male over 84.6 km. Different flight strategies were observed under the different experimental situ...
This thesis explores how onboard instrumentation can be used to study how birds interact with the at...
Birds in flight are proposed to adjust their body orientation (heading) and airspeed to wind conditi...
The metabolic costs of flight at a natural range of speeds were investigated in Rose Coloured Starli...
Two kestrels, a male and a female, were trained to fly over 50 and 125 m in a windless corridor. Bot...
Two kestrels, a male and a female, were trained to fly over 50 and 125 m in a windless corridor. Bot...
A male and a female kestrel were trained to fly over a mirror in a corridor, with lead weights attac...
Methods of observing birds in flight now include training them to fly under known conditions in wind...
The hunting flight of the kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) consists of short bouts of flight at wind spee...
Hunting kestrels were observed to hang, almost without wing-flapping, in fixed positions over a sea ...
Migrating birds, flying nonstop over long distances, are substantially heavier at the start than at ...
Hunting kestrels were observed to hang, almost without wing-flapping, in fixed positions over a sea ...
Avian flight cannot fail to impress; from the huge migratory distances covered by albatrosses to the...
The metabolic costs of flight at a natural range of speeds were investigated in Rose Coloured Starli...
This thesis explores how onboard instrumentation can be used to study how birds interact with the at...
Birds in flight are proposed to adjust their body orientation (heading) and airspeed to wind conditi...
The metabolic costs of flight at a natural range of speeds were investigated in Rose Coloured Starli...
Two kestrels, a male and a female, were trained to fly over 50 and 125 m in a windless corridor. Bot...
Two kestrels, a male and a female, were trained to fly over 50 and 125 m in a windless corridor. Bot...
A male and a female kestrel were trained to fly over a mirror in a corridor, with lead weights attac...
Methods of observing birds in flight now include training them to fly under known conditions in wind...
The hunting flight of the kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) consists of short bouts of flight at wind spee...
Hunting kestrels were observed to hang, almost without wing-flapping, in fixed positions over a sea ...
Migrating birds, flying nonstop over long distances, are substantially heavier at the start than at ...
Hunting kestrels were observed to hang, almost without wing-flapping, in fixed positions over a sea ...
Avian flight cannot fail to impress; from the huge migratory distances covered by albatrosses to the...
The metabolic costs of flight at a natural range of speeds were investigated in Rose Coloured Starli...
This thesis explores how onboard instrumentation can be used to study how birds interact with the at...
Birds in flight are proposed to adjust their body orientation (heading) and airspeed to wind conditi...
The metabolic costs of flight at a natural range of speeds were investigated in Rose Coloured Starli...