Puffins 'scout out' best migration route
The evidence comes from research by a team from Oxford University and Microsoft Research Cambridge which used BAS geolocater tags to track the migration movements of 18 birds: with 8 of these birds being tracked for two consecutive years.
A report of the research appears in this week's PLoS ONE.
The study found that the birds followed a wide range of different migration routes (suggesting their movements were not genetically predetermined) but that they were not merely random as the same bird followed a similar route each year. Because young puffins leave colonies at night, alone, long before their parents, the idea that they might learn a route directly from others also seems extremely unlikely.
'We think it's likely that, before they start breeding, young puffins explore the resources the ocean has to offer and come up with their own individual, often radically different, migration routes,' said Professor Tim Guilford of Oxford University's Department of Zoology, who co-led the study. 'This tendency to explore may enable them to develop a route which exploits all the best food sources in a particular area wherever these might happen to be.'
The team believe this kind of 'scouting' for good migration routes could also be used by many other species of birds, especially seabirds -- which can choose to stop and feed anywhere on the ocean during their migration.
Puffins 'scout out' best migration route
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