Image of the Day: Wildebeest Fitness Tracker

Data gathered from GPS-equipped collars show the animals walk long distances over days without stopping for a drink.

kerry grens
| 1 min read

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ABOVE: A wildebeest wearing a tracking collar in Botswana
PROFESSOR ALAN WILSON AWILSON@RVC.AC.UK

Wildebeest in Botswana will travel 80 km over five days—and all without drinking water, according to data from tracking collars researchers attached to the animals. In a paper published last week (October 23) in Nature, the research team reports that wildebeest have efficient muscles that “deliver more mechanical work and release less heat from each ATP molecule split than any mammalian muscle studied to date.”

The researchers collared 20 blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) after they were tranquilized by darts shot out of a helicopter. They gathered muscle biopsies while six of the animals were unconscious to test the tissue’s efficiency.

The animals typically went days without drinking water as they ranged across Makgadikgadi Pans National Park.

Back in the lab, tests on the muscle fibers showed they produced more work and less heat compared to cows’ tissue.

N.A. ...

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  • kerry grens

    Kerry Grens

    Kerry served as The Scientist’s news director until 2021. Before joining The Scientist in 2013, she was a stringer for Reuters Health, the senior health and science reporter at WHYY in Philadelphia, and the health and science reporter at New Hampshire Public Radio. Kerry got her start in journalism as a AAAS Mass Media fellow at KUNC in Colorado. She has a master’s in biological sciences from Stanford University and a biology degree from Loyola University Chicago.

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