FEATHER MUSIC by HUMMINGBIRD

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Male hummingbird species go beyond the usual avian song-making methods to attract their mates using their own method of sound production. Using the turbulence around their tail feathers when plummeting through the sky, the hummingbird adds a new depth to their conventional songs.


Christopher J. Clark, Damian Elias, and Richard Prum explain, ‘We show that these sounds are produced by air flowing past a feather, causing it to aeroelastically flutter and generate flutter-induced sound. Neighbouring feathers can be aerodynamically coupled and flutter either at the same frequency, resulting in sympathetic vibrations that increase loudness, or at different frequencies, resulting in audible interaction frequencies. Aeroelastic flutter is intrinsic to stiff airfoils such as feathers and thus explains tonal sounds that are common in bird flight. Although aeronautical engineers take extreme precautions to avoid flutter and its catastrophic consequences for aircraft, birds have instead repeatedly evolved novel acoustic communication signals from these incidental vibrations.’


Check out this You Tube clip for further information http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MytPNRW6ugQ

 

(Story taken from New York Times 8 September 2011)


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