![]() ![]() They often fly at speeds of 40 miles or more per hour, and in a dense group the space between them may be only a bit more than their body length. ![]() But the most impressive flockers are arguably those that form large, irregularly shaped masses, such as starlings, shorebirds, and blackbirds. ![]() Pelicans, geese, and other waterfowl form lines and Vs, presumably to take advantage of aerodynamic factors that save energy. But only a relative handful really fly together, creating what University of Rhode Island biologist Frank Heppner, in the 1970s, proposed calling “flight flocks”: namely, highly organized lines or clusters. See this article's accompanying photo gallery What else can it be?” mused one British naturalist, rather plaintively, in 1931. Scientists of the early 20th century, perhaps almost as credulous, groped for such mysterious and even mystical concepts as “natural telepathy” or a “group soul.” “It is transfused thought, thought transference-collective thinking practically. The ancient Romans had their explanation: Gods, they believed, hinted at their intentions in the way birds flew. Since primeval times people have looked at masses of birds moving as one and wondered how they do it. A distant murmuration of starlings-and yes, that really is the marvelous term for a group of these often-maligned birds-10,000 or more, rolls “like a drunken fingerprint across the sky,” as the poet Richard Wilbur wrote, smudging the dusk horizon with the quickness of a pulsating jellyfish. A dark flock of dunlins sprints straight over a marsh-until a merlin appears and they all veer at the same moment, flashing their bright white underparts and rearranging their group into an hourglass shape with shocking swiftness. ![]()
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