Charles Anderson discovers dragonflies that cross oceans

42,561 views ・ 2009-12-17

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
Actually, I come from Britain,
0
15260
3000
00:18
but I've been living in Maldives for 26 years now.
1
18260
3000
00:21
So, that's home really.
2
21260
2000
00:23
The Maldives, as I'm sure you're aware, are a chain of islands
3
23260
2000
00:25
off the southwest coast of India here.
4
25260
2000
00:27
Capital, Malé, where I live.
5
27260
2000
00:29
Actually, sitting here today in Mysore,
6
29260
3000
00:32
we're closer to Malé than we are to Delhi, for example.
7
32260
4000
00:36
If you're in IT, India, obviously, is the place to be at the moment.
8
36260
3000
00:39
But if you're a marine biologist, Maldives is not such a bad place to be.
9
39260
3000
00:42
And it has been my home these years.
10
42260
2000
00:44
For those of you who've been there, fantastic coral reefs,
11
44260
2000
00:46
fantastic diving, fantastic snorkeling.
12
46260
2000
00:48
I spend as much of my time as possible
13
48260
2000
00:50
investigating the marine life.
14
50260
2000
00:52
I study fish,
15
52260
2000
00:54
also the bigger things, whales and dolphins.
16
54260
3000
00:57
This is a blue whale. We have blue whales
17
57260
2000
00:59
in the waters around here, off Maldives,
18
59260
3000
01:02
around the waters of India. You can see them off Kerala.
19
62260
2000
01:04
And, in fact, we're very lucky in this region.
20
64260
2000
01:06
One of the best places in the world to see blue whales
21
66260
2000
01:08
is here in this region.
22
68260
2000
01:10
In Sri Lanka, if you go down to the south coast of Sri Lanka,
23
70260
3000
01:13
during the northeast monsoon season,
24
73260
2000
01:15
you can see blue whales very, very easily.
25
75260
2000
01:17
It's probably the best place in the world to see them.
26
77260
2000
01:19
Now, when I talk about the northeast monsoon season,
27
79260
3000
01:22
I'm sure many of you here know exactly what I mean,
28
82260
2000
01:24
but perhaps some of you are not quite so sure.
29
84260
3000
01:27
I need to explain a little bit about monsoons.
30
87260
2000
01:29
Now, monsoon, the root of the word "monsoon"
31
89260
2000
01:31
comes from the word "season."
32
91260
2000
01:33
So, it's just a season. And there are two seasons in most of South Asia.
33
93260
5000
01:38
And in the summer India heats up, gets very hot.
34
98260
2000
01:40
Hot air rises, and air is drawn in off the sea to replace it.
35
100260
5000
01:45
And the way it works is, it comes from the southwest.
36
105260
2000
01:47
It comes off the ocean here and is drawn up towards India.
37
107260
3000
01:50
So it comes from the southwest. It's a southwest monsoon.
38
110260
3000
01:53
Picks up moisture as it crosses the ocean.
39
113260
2000
01:55
That's what brings the monsoon rain.
40
115260
2000
01:57
And then in the winter things cool down.
41
117260
2000
01:59
High pressure builds over India.
42
119260
2000
02:01
And the whole system goes into reverse.
43
121260
3000
02:04
So, the wind is now coming from the northeast
44
124260
2000
02:06
out of India, across the Indian Ocean,
45
126260
2000
02:08
this way towards Africa.
46
128260
3000
02:11
Keep that in mind.
47
131260
2000
02:13
Now, I'm a marine biologist, but I'm actually
48
133260
2000
02:15
a bit of an old fashioned naturalist, I suppose.
49
135260
2000
02:17
I'm interested in all sorts of things, almost everything that moves,
50
137260
2000
02:19
including dragonflies. And I'm actually
51
139260
2000
02:21
going to talk, this afternoon, about dragonflies.
52
141260
2000
02:23
This is a very beautiful species, it's called the Oriental Scarlet.
53
143260
3000
02:26
And one thing you need to know about dragonflies,
54
146260
2000
02:28
one important thing,
55
148260
2000
02:30
is that they lay their eggs in fresh water.
56
150260
2000
02:32
They need fresh water to breed.
57
152260
2000
02:34
They lay the eggs into fresh water.
58
154260
2000
02:36
Little larvae hatch out in fresh water.
59
156260
2000
02:38
They feed on other little things. They feed on mosquito larvae.
60
158260
3000
02:41
So, they're very important.
61
161260
2000
02:43
They control mosquito larvae, among other things.
62
163260
2000
02:45
And they grow and grow by stages. And they climb out
63
165260
3000
02:48
of the water, burst out, as the adult which we see.
64
168260
2000
02:50
And typically, there is a lot of variation,
65
170260
2000
02:52
but if you have a dragonfly with, say, a one year life cycle,
66
172260
3000
02:55
which is quite typical, the larva, living in the fresh water,
67
175260
3000
02:58
lives for 10 or 11 months.
68
178260
3000
03:01
And then the adult, which comes after, lives for one or two months.
69
181260
3000
03:04
So it's essentially a freshwater animal.
70
184260
2000
03:06
It really does need fresh water.
71
186260
3000
03:09
Now, the particular species of dragonfly
72
189260
2000
03:11
I want to talk about is this one,
73
191260
2000
03:13
because most dragonflies, like the one we've just seen,
74
193260
3000
03:16
when the adult is there for its brief one or two months of life,
75
196260
2000
03:18
it doesn't go very far. It can't travel very far.
76
198260
3000
03:21
A few kilometers, maybe, is quite typical.
77
201260
2000
03:23
They are very good fliers, but they don't go too far.
78
203260
3000
03:26
But this guy is an exception.
79
206260
2000
03:28
And this is called the Globe Skimmer,
80
208260
2000
03:30
or Wandering Glider.
81
210260
2000
03:32
And, as the name might suggest, it is found pretty much around the world.
82
212260
3000
03:35
It lives throughout the tropics, the Americas,
83
215260
2000
03:37
Africa, Asia, Australia, into the Pacific.
84
217260
3000
03:40
And it wanders far and wide. We know that much about it.
85
220260
3000
03:43
But it really hasn't been studied very much.
86
223260
2000
03:45
It's a rather mediocre looking dragonfly.
87
225260
4000
03:49
If you're going to study dragonflies, you want to study those really bright beautiful ones,
88
229260
3000
03:52
like that red one. Or the really rare ones, the endemic endangered ones.
89
232260
3000
03:55
This is, it seems a bit dull you know.
90
235260
3000
03:58
It's sort of dull-colored. And it's fairly common.
91
238260
3000
04:01
And it occurs everywhere -- you know, why bother?
92
241260
3000
04:04
But if you take that attitude, you're actually missing something rather special.
93
244260
3000
04:07
Because this dragonfly has a rather amazing story to tell.
94
247260
3000
04:10
And I feel very privileged to have stumbled across it
95
250260
3000
04:13
living in the Maldives.
96
253260
2000
04:15
When I first went to the Maldives,
97
255260
2000
04:17
dead keen on diving, spent as much of my time
98
257260
3000
04:20
as I could in and under the water.
99
260260
2000
04:22
Didn't notice any dragonflies; maybe they were there, maybe they weren't.
100
262260
2000
04:24
Didn't notice them.
101
264260
2000
04:26
But after some time, after some months, one day
102
266260
2000
04:28
as I was going out and about,
103
268260
2000
04:30
suddenly I noticed hundreds of dragonflies, hundreds of dragonflies.
104
270260
4000
04:34
Something like this, these are all this species Globe Skimmer.
105
274260
3000
04:37
I didn't know at the time, but I know now,
106
277260
2000
04:39
they're Globe Skimmers, hundreds of them.
107
279260
2000
04:41
And they were there for some time. And then they were gone.
108
281260
2000
04:43
And I didn't think anything more of it until
109
283260
2000
04:45
the following year, when it happened again,
110
285260
2000
04:47
and then the year after that, and then the year after that.
111
287260
3000
04:50
And I was a bit slow, I didn't really take too much notice.
112
290260
3000
04:53
But I asked some Maldivian friends and colleagues, and yes they come every year.
113
293260
2000
04:55
And I asked people about them and yes,
114
295260
2000
04:57
they knew, but they didn't know anything,
115
297260
2000
04:59
where they came from, or anything.
116
299260
2000
05:01
And again I didn't think too much of it.
117
301260
3000
05:04
But slowly it began to dawn on me that something
118
304260
2000
05:06
rather special was happening.
119
306260
2000
05:08
Because dragonflies need fresh water to breed.
120
308260
3000
05:11
And the Maldives, and I'm sure some of you have been there --
121
311260
3000
05:14
so here is home.
122
314260
2000
05:16
So, Maldives, beautiful place.
123
316260
2000
05:18
(Laughter)
124
318260
2000
05:20
It's built entirely of coral reefs.
125
320260
2000
05:22
And on top of the coral reefs are sand banks.
126
322260
2000
05:24
Average height, about that much above sea level.
127
324260
3000
05:27
So, global warming, sea level rise, it's a real serious issue.
128
327260
3000
05:30
But I'm not going to talk about that.
129
330260
2000
05:32
Another important point of these sand banks
130
332260
2000
05:34
is that when it rains,
131
334260
2000
05:36
the rainwater soaks down into the soil. So, it's gone.
132
336260
2000
05:38
So, it stays under the soil.
133
338260
2000
05:40
The trees can put their roots into it.
134
340260
2000
05:42
Humans can dig holes and make a well.
135
342260
2000
05:44
But dragonflies -- a bit tricky.
136
344260
3000
05:47
There is no surface fresh water.
137
347260
2000
05:49
There are no ponds, streams, rivers, lakes,
138
349260
2000
05:51
nothing like that.
139
351260
2000
05:53
So, why is it that every year
140
353260
2000
05:55
millions of dragonflies, millions,
141
355260
2000
05:57
millions of dragonflies turn up?
142
357260
2000
05:59
I got a little bit curious. In fact I'll stop here,
143
359260
2000
06:01
because I want to ask, and there is a lot of people who,
144
361260
3000
06:04
from India of course, people who grew up spending your childhood here.
145
364260
3000
06:07
Those of you who are Indian or spent your childhood here,
146
367260
4000
06:11
let me have a show of hands, who of you --
147
371260
2000
06:13
not yet, not yet!
148
373260
2000
06:15
You're too keen. You're too keen. No. Hang on. Hang on.
149
375260
2000
06:17
Wait for the go. I'll say go.
150
377260
4000
06:21
Those of you who grew up in India,
151
381260
3000
06:24
do you remember in your childhood, dragonflies,
152
384260
2000
06:26
swarms of dragonflies? Maybe at school,
153
386260
2000
06:28
maybe tying little bits of string onto them?
154
388260
2000
06:30
Maybe pulling bits off? I'm not asking about that.
155
390260
2000
06:32
You've only got to say, do you remember seeing lots of dragonflies.
156
392260
4000
06:36
Any hands? Any hands? Yes. Thank you. Thank you.
157
396260
3000
06:39
It's a widespread phenomenon
158
399260
2000
06:41
throughout South Asia, including the Maldives.
159
401260
4000
06:45
And I got a bit curious about it.
160
405260
2000
06:47
In the Maldives -- now, in India there is plenty of water,
161
407260
2000
06:49
so, dragonflies, yeah, of course. Why not?
162
409260
2000
06:51
But in Maldives, no fresh water. So, what on Earth is going on?
163
411260
3000
06:54
And the first thing I did was started recording
164
414260
3000
06:57
when they turned up in the Maldives.
165
417260
2000
06:59
And there is the answer, 21st of October.
166
419260
2000
07:01
Not every year, that's the average date.
167
421260
2000
07:03
So, I've been writing it down for 15 years now.
168
423260
2000
07:05
You'd think they're coming from India. It's the closest place.
169
425260
2000
07:07
But in October, remember, we're still in southwest monsoon,
170
427260
3000
07:10
Maldives is still in the southwest monsoon.
171
430260
2000
07:12
But wind is, invariably, every time, is from the west.
172
432260
3000
07:15
It's going towards India, not from India.
173
435260
2000
07:17
So, are these things, how are these things getting here?
174
437260
2000
07:19
Are they coming from India against the wind?
175
439260
2000
07:21
Seemed a bit unlikely.
176
441260
2000
07:23
So, next thing I did is I got on the phone.
177
443260
2000
07:25
Maldives is a long archipelago.
178
445260
2000
07:27
It stretches about 500 miles, of course it's India here.
179
447260
2000
07:29
I got on the phone and emailed to friends and colleagues.
180
449260
2000
07:31
When do you see the dragonflies appear?
181
451260
3000
07:34
And pretty soon, a picture started emerging.
182
454260
2000
07:36
In Bangalore, a colleague there sent me
183
456260
2000
07:38
information for three years, average,
184
458260
2000
07:40
24th of September, so late September.
185
460260
2000
07:42
Down in Trivandrum, a bit later.
186
462260
2000
07:44
Far north of Maldives, a bit later.
187
464260
2000
07:46
Then Malé, then further south.
188
466260
2000
07:48
And then the southernmost Maldives.
189
468260
2000
07:50
It's pretty obvious, they're coming from India.
190
470260
3000
07:53
But they are coming 400 miles across the ocean, against the wind.
191
473260
3000
07:56
How on Earth are they doing that?
192
476260
2000
07:58
I didn't know.
193
478260
2000
08:00
The next thing I did was I started counting dragonflies.
194
480260
2000
08:02
I wanted to know about their seasonality,
195
482260
2000
08:04
what time of year, this is when they first arrive,
196
484260
2000
08:06
but how long are they around for? Does that give any clues?
197
486260
2000
08:08
So, I started a very rigorous scientific process.
198
488260
3000
08:11
I had a rigorous scientific transect.
199
491260
2000
08:13
I got on my bicycle,
200
493260
2000
08:15
and I cycled around the island of Malé.
201
495260
2000
08:17
It's about five kilometers around,
202
497260
2000
08:19
counting the dragonflies as I go,
203
499260
2000
08:21
trying not to bump into people as I'm looking in the trees.
204
501260
3000
08:24
And they're here for a very short time,
205
504260
4000
08:28
October, November, December. That's it.
206
508260
2000
08:30
And then they tail off, there's a few, but that's it.
207
510260
2000
08:32
October, November, December. That is not the northeast monsoon season.
208
512260
2000
08:34
That's not the southwest season.
209
514260
2000
08:36
That's the inter-monsoon,
210
516260
2000
08:38
the time when the monsoon changes.
211
518260
2000
08:40
Now, what I said was, you get the southwest monsoon going one way,
212
520260
3000
08:43
and then it changes and you get the northeast monsoon going the other way.
213
523260
4000
08:47
And that sort of gives the impression you've got one air mass
214
527260
2000
08:49
going up and down, up and down. It doesn't work like that.
215
529260
2000
08:51
What happens, actually, is there is two air masses.
216
531260
2000
08:53
And there is a front between them, and the front moves.
217
533260
3000
08:56
So, if you've got India here,
218
536260
2000
08:58
when the front is up above India you're into the southwest monsoon.
219
538260
2000
09:00
Then the front moves into the northeast monsoon.
220
540260
4000
09:04
And that front in the middle is not vertical,
221
544260
2000
09:06
it's at an angle.
222
546260
2000
09:08
So, as it comes over towards Malé
223
548260
2000
09:10
I'm standing in Malé underneath the front.
224
550260
3000
09:13
I can be in the southwest monsoon.
225
553260
2000
09:15
But the wind above is from the northeast monsoon.
226
555260
2000
09:17
So, the dragonflies are actually coming from India on the northeast monsoon,
227
557260
3000
09:20
but at an altitude at 1,000 to 2,000 meters up in the air. Incredible.
228
560260
6000
09:26
These little insects, it's the same ones we see out here [in India],
229
566260
3000
09:29
two inches long, five centimeters long,
230
569260
2000
09:31
flying in their millions, 400 miles across the ocean,
231
571260
4000
09:35
at 2,000 meters up. Quite incredible.
232
575260
4000
09:39
So, I was quite pleased with myself. I thought wow, I've tracked this one,
233
579260
3000
09:42
I know how they come here. Then I scratched my head a bit,
234
582260
2000
09:44
and that's okay,
235
584260
2000
09:46
I know how they come here, but why do they come here?
236
586260
3000
09:49
What are millions of dragonflies doing, flying out over the ocean every year
237
589260
5000
09:54
to their apparent doom?
238
594260
2000
09:56
It doesn't make sense. There is nothing for them in Maldives.
239
596260
2000
09:58
What on Earth are they doing?
240
598260
2000
10:00
Well, to cut a long story short,
241
600260
3000
10:03
they're actually flying right across the ocean.
242
603260
3000
10:06
They're making it all the way across to East Africa.
243
606260
3000
10:09
I know that because I have friends who work on fisheries' research vessels
244
609260
3000
10:12
who have sent to me reports from boats out in the ocean.
245
612260
2000
10:14
I know because we have reports from Seychelles,
246
614260
2000
10:16
which fit in as well, down here.
247
616260
2000
10:18
And I know because
248
618260
3000
10:21
when you look at the rainfall,
249
621260
2000
10:23
these particular insects, these Globe Skimmers
250
623260
2000
10:25
breed in temporary rain water pools.
251
625260
4000
10:29
Okay, they lay their eggs where the seasonal rains are,
252
629260
2000
10:31
the monsoon rains.
253
631260
2000
10:33
The larvae have to develop very quickly.
254
633260
3000
10:36
They only take six weeks. Instead of 11 months, they're six weeks.
255
636260
2000
10:38
They're up, and they're off.
256
638260
2000
10:40
Now, here we have, in case you can't read at the back,
257
640260
2000
10:42
the top is rainfall for India.
258
642260
2000
10:44
And we're starting in June. So this is the monsoon rain.
259
644260
3000
10:47
By September, October, it's drying out.
260
647260
2000
10:49
Nothing for these dragonflies. There is no more seasonal rain.
261
649260
2000
10:51
They've got to go hunting for seasonal rain.
262
651260
3000
10:54
And they fly south. As the monsoon withdraws to the south
263
654260
3000
10:57
they come down through Karnataka, into Kerala.
264
657260
3000
11:00
And then they run out of land.
265
660260
2000
11:02
But they are incredibly good fliers. This particular species,
266
662260
2000
11:04
it can fly for thousands of kilometers.
267
664260
2000
11:06
And it just keeps going. And the wind, the northeast wind
268
666260
2000
11:08
swooshes it around and carries it off across the ocean to Africa,
269
668260
4000
11:12
where it's raining.
270
672260
3000
11:15
And they are breeding in the rains of Africa.
271
675260
2000
11:17
Now, this is southeast Africa. It makes it look like there are sort of
272
677260
2000
11:19
two breeding periods here. It's slightly more complicated than that.
273
679260
4000
11:23
What's happening is they are breeding in the monsoon rains here.
274
683260
3000
11:26
And the dragonflies you can see today
275
686260
3000
11:29
outside here, on the campus,
276
689260
2000
11:31
are the young of this generation.
277
691260
3000
11:34
They hatched out in India.
278
694260
2000
11:36
They're looking for somewhere to breed. If it rains here they'll breed.
279
696260
3000
11:39
But most of them are going to carry on. And next stop,
280
699260
2000
11:41
perhaps only four or five days away is going to be East Africa.
281
701260
3000
11:44
The wind will swoosh them out across here.
282
704260
2000
11:46
If they pass the Maldives they might go and have a look,
283
706260
3000
11:49
nothing there, they'll carry on.
284
709260
2000
11:51
Here, here, Kenya, East Africa,
285
711260
5000
11:56
they've actually just come out of a long drought.
286
716260
2000
11:58
Just last week the rains broke. The short rains broke
287
718260
3000
12:01
and it's raining there now.
288
721260
2000
12:03
And the dragonflies are there. I have reports from my various contacts.
289
723260
3000
12:06
The dragonflies are here now. They're breeding there.
290
726260
2000
12:08
When those guys, they'll lay their eggs now.
291
728260
3000
12:11
They'll hatch out in six weeks. By that time
292
731260
2000
12:13
the seasonal rains have moved on. It's not there, it's down here.
293
733260
2000
12:15
They'll fly down here. And the clever thing is
294
735260
2000
12:17
the wind is always converging to where the rain is.
295
737260
3000
12:20
The rain occurs, these are summer rains.
296
740260
2000
12:22
This is a summer monsoon.
297
742260
2000
12:24
The sun is overhead there. Summer rains in southern Africa.
298
744260
3000
12:27
The sun is overhead, maximum heating,
299
747260
2000
12:29
maximum evaporation, maximum clouds,
300
749260
2000
12:31
maximum rainfall,
301
751260
2000
12:33
maximum opportunities for reproduction.
302
753260
2000
12:35
Not only that, because you have this convection,
303
755260
4000
12:39
you have this rising of the air
304
759260
2000
12:41
where it's hot, air is drawn in.
305
761260
2000
12:43
There's a convergence. So, wherever the rain is falling,
306
763260
3000
12:46
the air is drawn towards it to replace the air that's rising.
307
766260
3000
12:49
So, the little fellow that hatches out here,
308
769260
3000
12:52
he gets up into the air, he is automatically carried
309
772260
2000
12:54
to where the rain is falling.
310
774260
2000
12:56
Lay their eggs, next generation, they come up,
311
776260
3000
12:59
automatically carried to where the rain is falling.
312
779260
2000
13:01
It's now back there. They come out, it's time to come back.
313
781260
3000
13:04
So, in four generations, one, two, three,
314
784260
2000
13:06
four and then back.
315
786260
2000
13:08
A complete circuit of the Indian Ocean.
316
788260
3000
13:11
This is a circuit of about 16,000 kilometers.
317
791260
5000
13:16
16,000 kilometers, four generations, mind you,
318
796260
4000
13:20
for a two inch long insect. It's quite incredible.
319
800260
2000
13:22
Those of you from North America
320
802260
2000
13:24
will be familiar with the Monarch butterfly.
321
804260
3000
13:27
Which, up until now has had the longest known insect migration.
322
807260
3000
13:30
It's only half the length of this one.
323
810260
2000
13:32
And this crossing here, of the ocean,
324
812260
2000
13:34
is the only truly regular transoceanic crossing
325
814260
5000
13:39
of any insect.
326
819260
2000
13:41
A quite incredible feat.
327
821260
2000
13:43
And I only stumbled on this because I was living in Malé,
328
823260
2000
13:45
in Maldives for long enough
329
825260
2000
13:47
for it to percolate into my brain
330
827260
2000
13:49
that something rather special was going on.
331
829260
4000
13:53
But dragonflies are not the only creatures that make the crossing.
332
833260
2000
13:55
There is more to the story.
333
835260
2000
13:57
I'm also interested in birds. And I'm familiar
334
837260
2000
13:59
with this fellow. This is a rather special bird.
335
839260
2000
14:01
It's a falcon. It's called the eastern red-footed falcon, obviously.
336
841260
3000
14:04
But it's also called the Amur Falcon.
337
844260
2000
14:06
And it's called the Amur Falcon
338
846260
2000
14:08
because it breeds in Amurland.
339
848260
3000
14:11
Which is an area along the Amur River, which is up here.
340
851260
2000
14:13
It's the border, much of it is the border
341
853260
2000
14:15
between China and Russia, up here in the far east.
342
855260
3000
14:18
So, Siberia, Manchuria.
343
858260
2000
14:20
And that's where it breeds.
344
860260
2000
14:22
And if you're a falcon it's quite a nice place to be in the summer.
345
862260
2000
14:24
But it's a pretty miserable place to be in the winter.
346
864260
2000
14:26
It's, well, you can imagine.
347
866260
2000
14:28
So, as any sensible bird would do,
348
868260
4000
14:32
he moves south. They move south. The whole population moves south.
349
872260
3000
14:35
But then the being sensible stopped.
350
875260
2000
14:37
So, now they don't stop here, or even down here.
351
877260
2000
14:39
No, they turn across here.
352
879260
2000
14:41
They have a little refueling stop in northeastern India.
353
881260
4000
14:45
They come to the latitude of about Mumbai or Goa.
354
885260
3000
14:48
And then they strike out across the ocean, down to Kenya.
355
888260
2000
14:50
And down here, and they winter down here [in southern Africa].
356
890260
3000
14:53
Incredible. This is the most extraordinary migration
357
893260
3000
14:56
of any bird of prey. A quite incredible migration.
358
896260
3000
14:59
And they are not the only one that makes the crossing.
359
899260
2000
15:01
They have the most incredible journey, but several make the crossing from India
360
901260
3000
15:04
to Africa. Includes this one, the hobby.
361
904260
2000
15:06
This fellow is a very nice bird, this is the Pied cuckoo.
362
906260
2000
15:08
Those of you from northern India will be familiar with this.
363
908260
2000
15:10
It comes with the monsoons.
364
910260
2000
15:12
This time of year they cross back to Africa.
365
912260
3000
15:15
And this guy, the roller, a rather beautiful bird.
366
915260
2000
15:17
It's known as the Eurasian Roller. In India it occurs in the northwest,
367
917260
3000
15:20
so it's known as the Kashmir Roller.
368
920260
3000
15:23
And these birds, what I've done is I've complied all the records,
369
923260
2000
15:25
all the available records of these birds,
370
925260
2000
15:27
put them together, and found out they migrate at exactly the same time
371
927260
2000
15:29
as the dragonflies.
372
929260
2000
15:31
They make use of exactly the same winds.
373
931260
2000
15:33
They travel at exactly the same time with the same winds
374
933260
2000
15:35
to make the crossing. I know they travel at the same altitude.
375
935260
3000
15:38
It's known about the Amur Falcon. This guy, unfortunately,
376
938260
2000
15:40
one of these met an unfortunate end.
377
940260
2000
15:42
He was flying off the coast of Goa,
378
942260
3000
15:45
21 years ago, 1988. October, 1988.
379
945260
3000
15:48
An Indian Navy jet was flying off Goa,
380
948260
2000
15:50
bang! In the middle of the night. Fortunately, a two engine jet
381
950260
3000
15:53
got back to base, and they pulled the remains of one of these [Eurasian Rollers] out.
382
953260
3000
15:56
Flying at night over the Indian Ocean 2,424 meters.
383
956260
4000
16:00
Same height as the dragonflies go.
384
960260
2000
16:02
So, they are using the same winds.
385
962260
2000
16:04
And the other thing, the other important factor
386
964260
2000
16:06
for all these birds, all medium sized fellows,
387
966260
3000
16:09
and this includes the next slide as well, which is a bee-eater.
388
969260
3000
16:12
Bee-eaters eat bees. This one has a nice blue cheek.
389
972260
2000
16:14
It's a Blue-cheeked Bee-eater.
390
974260
3000
16:17
And every one of these birds that makes the crossing
391
977260
2000
16:19
from India to East Africa
392
979260
2000
16:21
eats insects, large insects,
393
981260
3000
16:24
the size of dragonflies. Thank you very much.
394
984260
3000
16:27
(Applause)
395
987260
5000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7