Charles Anderson discovers dragonflies that cross oceans

42,678 views ・ 2009-12-17

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

00:15
Actually, I come from Britain,
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but I've been living in Maldives for 26 years now.
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So, that's home really.
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The Maldives, as I'm sure you're aware, are a chain of islands
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off the southwest coast of India here.
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Capital, Malé, where I live.
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Actually, sitting here today in Mysore,
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we're closer to Malé than we are to Delhi, for example.
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If you're in IT, India, obviously, is the place to be at the moment.
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But if you're a marine biologist, Maldives is not such a bad place to be.
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And it has been my home these years.
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For those of you who've been there, fantastic coral reefs,
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fantastic diving, fantastic snorkeling.
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I spend as much of my time as possible
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investigating the marine life.
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I study fish,
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also the bigger things, whales and dolphins.
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This is a blue whale. We have blue whales
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in the waters around here, off Maldives,
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around the waters of India. You can see them off Kerala.
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And, in fact, we're very lucky in this region.
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One of the best places in the world to see blue whales
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is here in this region.
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In Sri Lanka, if you go down to the south coast of Sri Lanka,
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during the northeast monsoon season,
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you can see blue whales very, very easily.
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It's probably the best place in the world to see them.
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01:19
Now, when I talk about the northeast monsoon season,
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01:22
I'm sure many of you here know exactly what I mean,
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but perhaps some of you are not quite so sure.
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I need to explain a little bit about monsoons.
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Now, monsoon, the root of the word "monsoon"
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comes from the word "season."
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So, it's just a season. And there are two seasons in most of South Asia.
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And in the summer India heats up, gets very hot.
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Hot air rises, and air is drawn in off the sea to replace it.
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And the way it works is, it comes from the southwest.
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It comes off the ocean here and is drawn up towards India.
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So it comes from the southwest. It's a southwest monsoon.
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Picks up moisture as it crosses the ocean.
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That's what brings the monsoon rain.
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And then in the winter things cool down.
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High pressure builds over India.
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And the whole system goes into reverse.
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So, the wind is now coming from the northeast
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out of India, across the Indian Ocean,
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this way towards Africa.
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Keep that in mind.
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02:13
Now, I'm a marine biologist, but I'm actually
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a bit of an old fashioned naturalist, I suppose.
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I'm interested in all sorts of things, almost everything that moves,
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including dragonflies. And I'm actually
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going to talk, this afternoon, about dragonflies.
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This is a very beautiful species, it's called the Oriental Scarlet.
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And one thing you need to know about dragonflies,
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one important thing,
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is that they lay their eggs in fresh water.
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They need fresh water to breed.
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They lay the eggs into fresh water.
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Little larvae hatch out in fresh water.
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They feed on other little things. They feed on mosquito larvae.
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So, they're very important.
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They control mosquito larvae, among other things.
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And they grow and grow by stages. And they climb out
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of the water, burst out, as the adult which we see.
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And typically, there is a lot of variation,
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but if you have a dragonfly with, say, a one year life cycle,
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which is quite typical, the larva, living in the fresh water,
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lives for 10 or 11 months.
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And then the adult, which comes after, lives for one or two months.
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So it's essentially a freshwater animal.
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It really does need fresh water.
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Now, the particular species of dragonfly
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I want to talk about is this one,
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because most dragonflies, like the one we've just seen,
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when the adult is there for its brief one or two months of life,
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it doesn't go very far. It can't travel very far.
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A few kilometers, maybe, is quite typical.
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They are very good fliers, but they don't go too far.
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But this guy is an exception.
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And this is called the Globe Skimmer,
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or Wandering Glider.
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And, as the name might suggest, it is found pretty much around the world.
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It lives throughout the tropics, the Americas,
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Africa, Asia, Australia, into the Pacific.
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And it wanders far and wide. We know that much about it.
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But it really hasn't been studied very much.
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It's a rather mediocre looking dragonfly.
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If you're going to study dragonflies, you want to study those really bright beautiful ones,
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like that red one. Or the really rare ones, the endemic endangered ones.
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This is, it seems a bit dull you know.
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It's sort of dull-colored. And it's fairly common.
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And it occurs everywhere -- you know, why bother?
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But if you take that attitude, you're actually missing something rather special.
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Because this dragonfly has a rather amazing story to tell.
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And I feel very privileged to have stumbled across it
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living in the Maldives.
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When I first went to the Maldives,
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dead keen on diving, spent as much of my time
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as I could in and under the water.
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Didn't notice any dragonflies; maybe they were there, maybe they weren't.
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Didn't notice them.
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04:26
But after some time, after some months, one day
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as I was going out and about,
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suddenly I noticed hundreds of dragonflies, hundreds of dragonflies.
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Something like this, these are all this species Globe Skimmer.
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I didn't know at the time, but I know now,
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they're Globe Skimmers, hundreds of them.
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And they were there for some time. And then they were gone.
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And I didn't think anything more of it until
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the following year, when it happened again,
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and then the year after that, and then the year after that.
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And I was a bit slow, I didn't really take too much notice.
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But I asked some Maldivian friends and colleagues, and yes they come every year.
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And I asked people about them and yes,
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they knew, but they didn't know anything,
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where they came from, or anything.
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And again I didn't think too much of it.
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But slowly it began to dawn on me that something
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rather special was happening.
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Because dragonflies need fresh water to breed.
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And the Maldives, and I'm sure some of you have been there --
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so here is home.
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So, Maldives, beautiful place.
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(Laughter)
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It's built entirely of coral reefs.
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And on top of the coral reefs are sand banks.
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Average height, about that much above sea level.
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So, global warming, sea level rise, it's a real serious issue.
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But I'm not going to talk about that.
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Another important point of these sand banks
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is that when it rains,
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the rainwater soaks down into the soil. So, it's gone.
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So, it stays under the soil.
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The trees can put their roots into it.
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Humans can dig holes and make a well.
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But dragonflies -- a bit tricky.
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There is no surface fresh water.
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There are no ponds, streams, rivers, lakes,
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nothing like that.
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So, why is it that every year
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millions of dragonflies, millions,
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millions of dragonflies turn up?
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I got a little bit curious. In fact I'll stop here,
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because I want to ask, and there is a lot of people who,
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from India of course, people who grew up spending your childhood here.
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Those of you who are Indian or spent your childhood here,
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let me have a show of hands, who of you --
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not yet, not yet!
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You're too keen. You're too keen. No. Hang on. Hang on.
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Wait for the go. I'll say go.
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Those of you who grew up in India,
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do you remember in your childhood, dragonflies,
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swarms of dragonflies? Maybe at school,
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maybe tying little bits of string onto them?
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Maybe pulling bits off? I'm not asking about that.
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You've only got to say, do you remember seeing lots of dragonflies.
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Any hands? Any hands? Yes. Thank you. Thank you.
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It's a widespread phenomenon
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throughout South Asia, including the Maldives.
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And I got a bit curious about it.
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In the Maldives -- now, in India there is plenty of water,
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so, dragonflies, yeah, of course. Why not?
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But in Maldives, no fresh water. So, what on Earth is going on?
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And the first thing I did was started recording
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when they turned up in the Maldives.
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And there is the answer, 21st of October.
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Not every year, that's the average date.
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So, I've been writing it down for 15 years now.
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You'd think they're coming from India. It's the closest place.
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But in October, remember, we're still in southwest monsoon,
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Maldives is still in the southwest monsoon.
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But wind is, invariably, every time, is from the west.
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It's going towards India, not from India.
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So, are these things, how are these things getting here?
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Are they coming from India against the wind?
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Seemed a bit unlikely.
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So, next thing I did is I got on the phone.
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Maldives is a long archipelago.
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It stretches about 500 miles, of course it's India here.
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I got on the phone and emailed to friends and colleagues.
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When do you see the dragonflies appear?
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And pretty soon, a picture started emerging.
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In Bangalore, a colleague there sent me
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information for three years, average,
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24th of September, so late September.
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Down in Trivandrum, a bit later.
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Far north of Maldives, a bit later.
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Then Malé, then further south.
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And then the southernmost Maldives.
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It's pretty obvious, they're coming from India.
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But they are coming 400 miles across the ocean, against the wind.
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How on Earth are they doing that?
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I didn't know.
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The next thing I did was I started counting dragonflies.
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I wanted to know about their seasonality,
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what time of year, this is when they first arrive,
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but how long are they around for? Does that give any clues?
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So, I started a very rigorous scientific process.
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I had a rigorous scientific transect.
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I got on my bicycle,
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and I cycled around the island of Malé.
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It's about five kilometers around,
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counting the dragonflies as I go,
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trying not to bump into people as I'm looking in the trees.
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And they're here for a very short time,
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October, November, December. That's it.
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And then they tail off, there's a few, but that's it.
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08:32
October, November, December. That is not the northeast monsoon season.
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That's not the southwest season.
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That's the inter-monsoon,
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the time when the monsoon changes.
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Now, what I said was, you get the southwest monsoon going one way,
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and then it changes and you get the northeast monsoon going the other way.
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And that sort of gives the impression you've got one air mass
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going up and down, up and down. It doesn't work like that.
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What happens, actually, is there is two air masses.
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And there is a front between them, and the front moves.
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So, if you've got India here,
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when the front is up above India you're into the southwest monsoon.
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Then the front moves into the northeast monsoon.
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And that front in the middle is not vertical,
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it's at an angle.
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So, as it comes over towards Malé
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I'm standing in Malé underneath the front.
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I can be in the southwest monsoon.
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But the wind above is from the northeast monsoon.
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So, the dragonflies are actually coming from India on the northeast monsoon,
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but at an altitude at 1,000 to 2,000 meters up in the air. Incredible.
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These little insects, it's the same ones we see out here [in India],
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two inches long, five centimeters long,
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flying in their millions, 400 miles across the ocean,
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at 2,000 meters up. Quite incredible.
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So, I was quite pleased with myself. I thought wow, I've tracked this one,
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I know how they come here. Then I scratched my head a bit,
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and that's okay,
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I know how they come here, but why do they come here?
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What are millions of dragonflies doing, flying out over the ocean every year
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to their apparent doom?
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It doesn't make sense. There is nothing for them in Maldives.
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What on Earth are they doing?
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Well, to cut a long story short,
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they're actually flying right across the ocean.
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They're making it all the way across to East Africa.
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I know that because I have friends who work on fisheries' research vessels
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who have sent to me reports from boats out in the ocean.
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I know because we have reports from Seychelles,
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which fit in as well, down here.
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And I know because
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when you look at the rainfall,
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these particular insects, these Globe Skimmers
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breed in temporary rain water pools.
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Okay, they lay their eggs where the seasonal rains are,
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the monsoon rains.
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The larvae have to develop very quickly.
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They only take six weeks. Instead of 11 months, they're six weeks.
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They're up, and they're off.
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Now, here we have, in case you can't read at the back,
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the top is rainfall for India.
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And we're starting in June. So this is the monsoon rain.
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By September, October, it's drying out.
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Nothing for these dragonflies. There is no more seasonal rain.
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They've got to go hunting for seasonal rain.
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And they fly south. As the monsoon withdraws to the south
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they come down through Karnataka, into Kerala.
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And then they run out of land.
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But they are incredibly good fliers. This particular species,
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it can fly for thousands of kilometers.
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And it just keeps going. And the wind, the northeast wind
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swooshes it around and carries it off across the ocean to Africa,
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where it's raining.
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And they are breeding in the rains of Africa.
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Now, this is southeast Africa. It makes it look like there are sort of
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two breeding periods here. It's slightly more complicated than that.
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What's happening is they are breeding in the monsoon rains here.
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And the dragonflies you can see today
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outside here, on the campus,
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are the young of this generation.
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They hatched out in India.
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They're looking for somewhere to breed. If it rains here they'll breed.
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But most of them are going to carry on. And next stop,
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perhaps only four or five days away is going to be East Africa.
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The wind will swoosh them out across here.
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If they pass the Maldives they might go and have a look,
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nothing there, they'll carry on.
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Here, here, Kenya, East Africa,
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they've actually just come out of a long drought.
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Just last week the rains broke. The short rains broke
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and it's raining there now.
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And the dragonflies are there. I have reports from my various contacts.
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The dragonflies are here now. They're breeding there.
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When those guys, they'll lay their eggs now.
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They'll hatch out in six weeks. By that time
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the seasonal rains have moved on. It's not there, it's down here.
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They'll fly down here. And the clever thing is
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the wind is always converging to where the rain is.
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The rain occurs, these are summer rains.
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This is a summer monsoon.
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The sun is overhead there. Summer rains in southern Africa.
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The sun is overhead, maximum heating,
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maximum evaporation, maximum clouds,
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maximum rainfall,
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maximum opportunities for reproduction.
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Not only that, because you have this convection,
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you have this rising of the air
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where it's hot, air is drawn in.
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There's a convergence. So, wherever the rain is falling,
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the air is drawn towards it to replace the air that's rising.
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So, the little fellow that hatches out here,
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he gets up into the air, he is automatically carried
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to where the rain is falling.
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Lay their eggs, next generation, they come up,
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automatically carried to where the rain is falling.
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It's now back there. They come out, it's time to come back.
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So, in four generations, one, two, three,
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four and then back.
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A complete circuit of the Indian Ocean.
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This is a circuit of about 16,000 kilometers.
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16,000 kilometers, four generations, mind you,
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for a two inch long insect. It's quite incredible.
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Those of you from North America
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will be familiar with the Monarch butterfly.
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Which, up until now has had the longest known insect migration.
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It's only half the length of this one.
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And this crossing here, of the ocean,
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is the only truly regular transoceanic crossing
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of any insect.
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A quite incredible feat.
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And I only stumbled on this because I was living in Malé,
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in Maldives for long enough
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for it to percolate into my brain
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that something rather special was going on.
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But dragonflies are not the only creatures that make the crossing.
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There is more to the story.
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I'm also interested in birds. And I'm familiar
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with this fellow. This is a rather special bird.
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It's a falcon. It's called the eastern red-footed falcon, obviously.
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But it's also called the Amur Falcon.
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And it's called the Amur Falcon
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because it breeds in Amurland.
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Which is an area along the Amur River, which is up here.
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It's the border, much of it is the border
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between China and Russia, up here in the far east.
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So, Siberia, Manchuria.
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And that's where it breeds.
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And if you're a falcon it's quite a nice place to be in the summer.
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But it's a pretty miserable place to be in the winter.
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It's, well, you can imagine.
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So, as any sensible bird would do,
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he moves south. They move south. The whole population moves south.
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But then the being sensible stopped.
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So, now they don't stop here, or even down here.
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No, they turn across here.
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They have a little refueling stop in northeastern India.
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They come to the latitude of about Mumbai or Goa.
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And then they strike out across the ocean, down to Kenya.
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And down here, and they winter down here [in southern Africa].
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Incredible. This is the most extraordinary migration
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of any bird of prey. A quite incredible migration.
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And they are not the only one that makes the crossing.
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They have the most incredible journey, but several make the crossing from India
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to Africa. Includes this one, the hobby.
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This fellow is a very nice bird, this is the Pied cuckoo.
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Those of you from northern India will be familiar with this.
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It comes with the monsoons.
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This time of year they cross back to Africa.
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And this guy, the roller, a rather beautiful bird.
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It's known as the Eurasian Roller. In India it occurs in the northwest,
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so it's known as the Kashmir Roller.
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And these birds, what I've done is I've complied all the records,
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all the available records of these birds,
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put them together, and found out they migrate at exactly the same time
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as the dragonflies.
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They make use of exactly the same winds.
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They travel at exactly the same time with the same winds
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to make the crossing. I know they travel at the same altitude.
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It's known about the Amur Falcon. This guy, unfortunately,
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one of these met an unfortunate end.
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He was flying off the coast of Goa,
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21 years ago, 1988. October, 1988.
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An Indian Navy jet was flying off Goa,
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bang! In the middle of the night. Fortunately, a two engine jet
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got back to base, and they pulled the remains of one of these [Eurasian Rollers] out.
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Flying at night over the Indian Ocean 2,424 meters.
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Same height as the dragonflies go.
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So, they are using the same winds.
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And the other thing, the other important factor
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for all these birds, all medium sized fellows,
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and this includes the next slide as well, which is a bee-eater.
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Bee-eaters eat bees. This one has a nice blue cheek.
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It's a Blue-cheeked Bee-eater.
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And every one of these birds that makes the crossing
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from India to East Africa
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eats insects, large insects,
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the size of dragonflies. Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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