Into rude air: hummingbird flight performance in variable aerial environments

Abstract

Hummingbirds are well known for their ability to sustain hovering flight, but many other remarkable features of manoeuvrability characterize the more than 330 species of trochilid. Most research on hummingbird flight has been focused on either forward flight or hovering in otherwise non-perturbed air. In nature, however, hummingbirds fly through and must compensate for substantial environmental perturbation, including heavy rain, unpredictable updraughts and turbulent eddies. Here, we review recent studies on hummingbirds flying within challenging aerial environments, and discuss both the direct and indirect effects of unsteady environmental flows such as rain and von Kármán vortex streets. Both perturbation intensity and the spatio-temporal scale of disturbance (expressed with respect to characteristic body size) will influence mechanical responses of volant taxa. Most features of hummingbird manoeuvrability remain undescribed, as do evolutionary patterns of flight-related adaptation within the lineage. Trochilid flight performance under natural conditions far exceeds that of microair vehicles at similar scales, and the group as a whole presents many research opportunities for understanding aerial manoeuvrability.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Sep 26, 2016
Source ID
10.1098/rstb.2015.0387

Entities

People

  • Hao Wang
  • M. Badger
  • R. Dudley
  • V. M. Ortega-jimenez

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics
  • Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Aerial Unmanned Vehicle Swarm Micro Periodontal Dentistry.
  • Aquatic Ecology
  • Theoretical Analysis.