Rising Tide Images
Plover Perch
A Pacific golden plover that has been probing the mud and leaf litter for earthworms, perches contentedly one-legged on a bolder to survey the area for additional provisions. This beautiful migratory plover, or kōlea, defends and enjoys its winter territory on Oahu. Kōlea fly to the Hawaiian Islands after a five-month summer breeding season in arctic Alaska. The trip spans approximately 3,000 miles of open ocean requiring an exhaustive 3 to 4 days and nights of nonstop flight. Incredibly, some will continue their marathon semiannual migration to oceanic islands of the southern Pacific resulting in an annual round trip total of about 15,000 miles. Their fledglings set off from the tundra searching for an island and a suitable territory a month or two after the adults have departed. Many first-year birds probably miss landfall and perish at sea. Survivors are superb navigators with territorial fidelity, using the stars and the earth’s magnetic field to find their way over the featureless ocean to the same small patch of land every year. Like most transoceanic migratory birds, they may use the earth’s magnetic field visually with the magnetoreception molecules of cryptochrome in their retinae.
Plover Perch
A Pacific golden plover that has been probing the mud and leaf litter for earthworms, perches contentedly one-legged on a bolder to survey the area for additional provisions. This beautiful migratory plover, or kōlea, defends and enjoys its winter territory on Oahu. Kōlea fly to the Hawaiian Islands after a five-month summer breeding season in arctic Alaska. The trip spans approximately 3,000 miles of open ocean requiring an exhaustive 3 to 4 days and nights of nonstop flight. Incredibly, some will continue their marathon semiannual migration to oceanic islands of the southern Pacific resulting in an annual round trip total of about 15,000 miles. Their fledglings set off from the tundra searching for an island and a suitable territory a month or two after the adults have departed. Many first-year birds probably miss landfall and perish at sea. Survivors are superb navigators with territorial fidelity, using the stars and the earth’s magnetic field to find their way over the featureless ocean to the same small patch of land every year. Like most transoceanic migratory birds, they may use the earth’s magnetic field visually with the magnetoreception molecules of cryptochrome in their retinae.