This will interest some...especially you marathoners -- Jim Mattsson 

From: Important Bird Areas Program Discussion List on behalf of CECIL, John 

Sent: Mon 1/31/2011 10:04 AM 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: FW: Ruddy hell: turnstone flies 27,000 kms - twice!! 





Too good not to share and it’s very likely this bird is stopping at Important 
Bird Areas in Alaska as well as other spots along it’s migratory path. 



To read this article on line and see an enlarged version of a map visit - 
http://www.birdlife.org/community/2011/01/ruddy-hell-turnstone-flies-27000-kms-%E2%80%93-twice/
 


Ruddy hell: turnstone flies 27,000 kms – twice!! 


http://www.birdlife.org/community/2011/01/ruddy-hell-turnstone-flies-27000-kms-%e2%80%93-twice/?pfstyle=wp
 

January 31, 2011 




Ruddy Turnstone 9Y photographed in Taiwan on 11 May 2009 after departing 
south-east Australia on 27 April ( Huang Ming). 

Researchers from the Victorian Wader Study Group – a special interest group of 
Birds Australia [BirdLife Partner] - have just recaptured a Ruddy Turnstone 
Arenaria interpres which has completed a 27,000 km round trip migration for the 
second time. 

This is the first time a wader has been tracked with a geolocator on its 
complete migration in successive years. 

The bird had a one gram light sensor data logger (geolocator) attached to its 
leg. This device recorded where the bird was each morning and evening. In each 
year the device was attached to the bird in mid April on a beach at Flinders, 
Victoria, in southeast Australia. 

Ruddy Turnstones are a small wader weighing less than 100 grams and spend the 
(austral) summer months on many of the beaches around Australia. They are one 
of the family of waders that migrate huge distances to Siberia in Russia to 
breed. 




Researchers have used these data logging devices over the last two years to 
find out the key stopover locations which are so important for the birds to 
refuel on their long journey. 

Members of the study group include Dr Clive Minton, Ken Gosbell, Penny Johns 
and Prof Marcel Klaassen (of Deakin University). 

“The data retrieved so far shows that the birds generally start their northward 
migration with an initial nonstop flight of around 7,600km in six days to 
Taiwan or adjacent regions” Dr Minton said. 

“There they refuel on the tidal flats before moving north to the Yellow Sea and 
northern China. They then make a flight of over 5,000kms to the breeding 
grounds in northern Siberia, arriving in the first week of June. 

“One of the interesting findings is that after breeding, the return journey 
shows considerable variation, no two birds following the same route. Some 
return through Asia while an amazing alternate route has been demonstrated by 
these new results. 

“This is a trans-Pacific route where the bird moves east to the Aleutian 
Islands off southwest Alaska before making the huge journey across the Pacific, 
stopping only once or twice before reaching Australia in early December.” 

The first record of this flight was in 2009 when the bird spent nearly two 
months in the Aleutians before setting off southward over the Pacific Ocean and 
making a nonstop flight of 7,800kms to Kirabati before making the 5,000km trip 
back to Flinders, Victoria. In 2010 the same bird undertook a similar 
incredible journey, this time stopping off in the Marshall Islands and Vanuatu 
in the Pacific before returning to Australia. 

Turnstones live up to 20 years and such a bird following this 27,000 km 
trans-Pacific route would have flown over 500,000 kilometres in its lifetime. 

Scientists from the Australasian Wader Studies Group of Birds Australia and 
Deakin University are still puzzling over why individual Ruddy Turnstones use 
such widely differing routes for their annual migrations. The study highlights 
the importance of key regions within the flyway. Scientists are concerned about 
the ability of these and similar birds to cope with the massive habitat changes 
occurring as a result of large reclamation and urban development projects.

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