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Migrating Birds Take Hundreds of Powernaps.

Ant writes "MSNBC reports that to help make up for sleep lost during marathon night flights, migratory birds take hundreds of powernaps during the day, each lasting only a few seconds, a new study suggests. Every autumn, Swainson's thrushes fly up to 3,000 miles from their breeding grounds in northern Canada and Alaska to winter in Central and South America. Come spring, the birds make the long trek back. The birds fly mostly at night and often for long hours at a time, leaving little time for sleep."

16 of 141 comments (clear)

  1. this early in the morning by yincrash · · Score: 5, Funny

    At 4:20 in the morning, I could a couple of power naps as well.

  2. Why they sleep only a few seconds by Jamu · · Score: 5, Funny

    Flap flap flap
    Must stay awake...
    Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
    AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH! I'm falling!
    Flapflapflapflapflap
    Flap flap flap
    Must stay awake...

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    1. Re:Why they sleep only a few seconds by Archibald+Buttle · · Score: 4, Interesting

      :-)

      Not all that far from the truth.

      Albatross (and related species) spend virtually their whole lives at sea, returning to land only to breed. They fish for food, but can't sleep on the sea surface because they'd get caught by preditors (some shark and whale species, sealions, etc). Their only opportunity for sleep is whilst they're flying - so they nap for a few seconds whilst they're gliding.

  3. Did the same thing as a student by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    When I was a student I also took several power-naps during the day to make up for lack of sleep.

    They were called lectures.

  4. Electronic Arts applauds by Green+Salad · · Score: 4, Funny

    The HR department at Electronic Arts applauds the innovation as a "best practice."

  5. Ah shucks by novus+ordo · · Score: 4, Funny
    "I think what's interesting about our findings is that even animals that should be highly adapted to sleep loss cannot go on indefinitely," Fuchs said. "That a need for sleep cannot be eliminated even in these species underscores the importance of sleep for many, if not all, animals."
    I hope I'm not the one to break this to my boss...he might even try to disprove him.
    --
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  6. Maybe.. by l0cust · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe the birds were getting those drowsy sessions and 'power naps' BECAUSE they were caged and being subjected to go through utterly boring and long observation periods when they would rather be flying over the ocean somewhere. Or they just closed their eyes every few minutes to curse the researchers to hell for caging them in the first place.

    But seriously, studies of this kind tend to lose credibility when they start predicting the free behaviour of species while testing them under captive conditions. Going by this logic, I can say that lions in jungle start rattling the nearest metal bars or objects they can find when they feel hungry because I observed this behaviour in a bunch of lions in the nearest zoo. I know its stretching the point a bit, and that 'some' behaviour show consistence irrespective of the state of the subject animal/bird, BUT trying to deduce migratory behaviour (out of all things) from a bunch of observational data collected from birds in cages is stretching it too far IMHO.

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  7. Yep... by DuranDuran · · Score: 5, Funny

    > to help make up for sleep lost during marathon night flights, migratory birds take hundreds of powernaps during the day, each lasting only a few seconds

    Yep, just like my crazy uncle. But instead of gliding, he uses the cruise control.

    --
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    1. Re:Yep... by rf0 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Its like the old joke that Uncle Harold died peacfully in his sleep. Its just all his passengers in the car that were screaming

  8. Humans Too by HoneyBeeSpace · · Score: 5, Informative

    Humans do the same thing. The term is "microsleep", lasting from 2 to 30 seconds or so, often with eyes open. A quick search returns hundreds of PDFs on the phenomenon.

    As usual, there is a WikiPedia entry (not very useful) and this site too: http://www.sleepdex.org/microsleep.htm

    Hmmm... people do it. Birds do it. I'll be shocked when the research is published that fish do it too.

  9. Re:Not convinced by tygerstripes · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't be stupid. Alligators can't balance on a wire.

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  10. How do they avoid crashing? by giafly · · Score: 4, Interesting

    FTA, these swallows sleep for "9 seconds on average".
    If one stops flying completely for 9 seconds, the approximate distance it would fall is s = ut + 1/2at**2 ... 0+1/2*32*9*9 feet ... 1296 feet.
    But the barn swallow typically migrates within within 100 feet of the ground .
    So how do they avoid crashing?

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    1. Re:How do they avoid crashing? by kfg · · Score: 5, Informative

      But the barn swallow typically migrates within within 100 feet of the ground .

      Even more impressive is the behavior of the Wandering Albatross which can fly for days at a time within a wingspan of ocean waves (albeit their wingspan is about 10 feet). They can do this even during a full gale.

      So how do they avoid crashing?

      They soar. Wings generate lift just because they're there and under the right conditions a bird might well increase its altitude while napping.

      As a wave moves through the air, or air moves over a hill, it compresses and rises. Thus a sleeping bird may find itself safely carried over variations in surface hight without having to do a thing. It's called "slope soaring."

      KFG

  11. Urban legend alert by Falkkin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Urban legend -- albatrosses sleep on the surface, not in flight.

    See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albatross#Morphology_ and_flight

  12. You couldn't be more wrong. by viewtouch · · Score: 4, Informative

    First of all, experiments I've read about have been done on birds that are flying, hence no cage.

    More importantly, though, although you must accept the inevitability of sleep, nonetheless you assume that sleep is a behavior and that behavior can be affected by a cage. Well, the view that sleep is behavior has no scientific basis, in spite of the fact that we (as do other animals) have some control over when we sleep, which is, well, totally beside the point. The fact remains that we, and all animals, MUST sleep and we cannot change that. If we don't sleep, our immune and nervous systems shut down and we die. This is true of all animals.

    The latest science indicates beyond any doubt that sleep has nothing to do with behavior but is, rather, a metabolic state (anabolism) which is, of course, cell-based and which, therefore, cannot be affected by putting a bird in a cage or by attaching a neuro-transmitter to a flying bird.

    Studies of this kind, therefore, do NOT lose credibility because it is not behavior which is being tested, but rather it is what is being tested is a simple measurement of how the catabolic - anabolic (awake - asleep) balance is maintained in birds, in particular.

    It's too bad everybody seems to think that either this is just a humorous article or that they aren't interested enough in understanding what sleep is to spend a few minutes either thinking about what sleep really is, or reading about it. Sleep is important enough that if you try to do without it you will soon be rendered useless and die. Understanding sleep can make your life better. Not getting good sleep makes your life hell, if it doesn't kill you. You can't alter the basic metabolism of life by deciding that you are somehow special and you can't understand sleep if you simply dismiss it as behavior.

  13. Did Anyone RTFA? by ironwill96 · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the article it states: "Some scientists speculate that some birds might even be able to catch up on some forms of sleep while in flight, but this idea has yet to be fully tested.".

    The article is not even about sleeping while flying, they are talking entirely of the bird's sleep states during the daytime (and then the birds would fly at night). But, what do I expect? This is /. after all where nobody reads the article and makes hilarious comments anyway.

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