Sustained hovering, head stabilization and vision through the water surface in the Pied kingfisher ( Ceryle rudis )

Gadi Katzir, Dotan Berman, Moshe Nathan, Daniel Weihs

Research output: Working paper

Abstract

Abstract Pied kingfishers ( Ceryle rudis ) capture fish by plunge diving from hovering that may last several minutes. Hovering is the most energy-consuming mode of flight and depends on active wing flapping and facing headwind. The power for hovering is mass dependent increasing as the cube of the size, while aerodynamic forces increase only quadratically with size. Consequently, birds above a certain body mass can hover only with headwind and for very short durations. Hummingbirds are referred to as the only birds capable of hovering without wind (sustained hovering) due to their small size (ca. 2-20 gr), high wing-beat frequency and unique anatomy. We studied the hovering characteristics of pied kingfishers in relation to wind and sun orientation, in 139 hovers. Furthermore, plunge diving necessitates the coping with the visual effects of light at the air/water interface. The kingfishers oriented their body axis towards the wind more than towards the sun. Hovering in little or no wind was common. With increased wind speed (a) orientation precision increased, (b) wing beat amplitude did not change, (c) wing beat frequency decreased and (d) body tilt became more horizontal. The head was highly stabilized and with orientations that indicated monocular viewing of prey. We conclude that pied kingfishers achieve sustained hovering. This is despite their being significantly heavier than the theoretical maximum and showing ordinary kinematics and morphology. Head stabilization is a means of aiding viewing of submerged prey across the interface.
Original languageEnglish
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Sep 2018

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