birding-aus

Wood-swallows - Do they soar?

To: brian fleming <>
Subject: Wood-swallows - Do they soar?
From: Chris Charles <>
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2006 19:39:22 +1100
Pedantically, the wing plan-form is not the arbiter of soaring capability. All birds can soar if you allow the Pizzey definition, ie rise relative to the ground without wing beat. It just depends on the birds wing loading (ie the birds weight divided by the wing area) & the vertical velocity of the rising air. An example is slope soaring where air (wind) rising over an obstruction can provide high vertical velocities & swallows will & do soar in these conditions.
Aspect ratio plays a minor role as higher aspect ratios (ie span  
divided by chord (effective width)) are more efficient, but at the  
cost of manoeuverability. Other efficiencies such as low parasitic  
drag (eg legs tucked out of the airstream) & effective wing sections  
also play a part.

Chris Charles
Licole Pty Ltd
0412 911 184




On 20/11/2006, at 2:54 PM, brian fleming wrote:

I recently said on 'Birding-aus' that 'Wood-swallows are the only soaring passerines". While I am quite certain from observation that they do soar, I have been wondering where I first saw this in print. After an extensive search of the thousand or so bird-books in the house (no exaggeration), I can say that I first found it in a work by E. Thomas Gilliard, Associate Curator of Birds, American Museum of Natural History - "Living Birds of the World" (Hamish Hamilton, London, 1958). Just because it's an older book does not mean that it doesn't contain useful information. On p. 303, he writes: "The finest of passerine fliers, and excepting the ravens the only songbirds known to soar, are the wood-swallows.... When hunting, wood-swallows often soar high into the air on rigid wings. At such times they resemble miniature vultures. Their food consists entirely of insects captured in the air." [We now know that they also take nectar with brushlike tongues, and very surprised I was when I first saw them doing so in a flowering Ironbark at Cocoparra.]
The early 1980 edition of Graham Pizzey's Collins FG (the one with  
Ray Doyle's illustrations)  gave more room for description:
 "On the wing their silhouette is rather like the Common Starling;   
the flight is graceful and absolutely diagnostic:  quick shallow  
wingbeats, circling glides and soaring on shapely pointed wings and  
spread tails; but pursuing flight can be dashing." (p.392).
Current edition, (1997) ill. Frank Knight, P., in the Family  
Introductions section, p 542:
  "Unrelated to true swallows, woodswallows are graceful songbirds  
with broad, pointed wings;  they are among the few songbirds that  
soar."
   And what is soaring flight anyway?  Pizzey's definition (p. 551)  
is "rising flight on still, extended wings, using thermals or  
updraughts to gain height without flapping".
    It is typically seen in broad-winged birds such as large  
raptors, storks, pelicans etc - I recall resting during a mountain  
hike, flat on my back, while we watched a Brown Goshawk circling up  
in a thermal,  never moving its wings until lost to human sight.  I  
understand that in Africa small vultures such as the Egyptian can  
get airborne much earlier in the day than the very large heavy  
species, enabling them to get a start on small and part-eaten  
carcasses before the big ones arrive and bully them off.  The  
'dynamic soaring' utilized by albatrosses over waves, is a  
different action and requires a long, narrow wing (high aspect-ratio).
   Swallows have very narrow wings and cannot soar, though of  
course they can and do glide between burst of flapping.  I don't  
really know whether Needletail Swifts soar, though their powers of  
flight are prodigious.  Half their weight is breast muscles,  
according to the books.  Can they gain height without too much  
effort by using the updraughts in the thunderstorms which often  
seem to bring them?
Anthea Fleming
in Melbourne


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