Behavior Brief

A round-up of recent discoveries in behavior research

Written byRina Shaikh-Lesko
| 3 min read

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FLICKR, JIM BENDON

Flocks of birds are able to navigate around obstacles because individual birds prefer the right or left side, according to a study published this month (March 6) in PLOS Computational Biology. A team led by Mandyam Srinivasam of the University of Queensland, Australia, observed how budgerigars chose to fly through wind tunnels in an attempt to understand how the small birds maneuver so swiftly without colliding with obstacles—or one another—in dense forests.

“You cannot help but wonder how they do this so quickly without banging into branches”, Srinivasan told the Brisbane Times. “We wondered if they have any rules when they decided what route to take.”

This left-right bias makes it easier for the flock to split up to get past hurdles without crowding each ...

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