Evaluating the effects of moonlight on the vertical flight profiles of three western palaearctic swifts

Proc Biol Sci. 2023 Nov 8;290(2010):20230957. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2023.0957. Epub 2023 Nov 1.

Abstract

Recent studies have suggested the presence of moonlight mediated behaviour in avian aerial insectivores, such as swifts. Here, we use the combined analysis of state-of-the-art activity logger data across three swift species, the common, pallid and alpine swifts, to quantify flight height and activity in responses to moonlight-driven crepuscular and nocturnal light conditions. Our results show a significant response in flight heights to moonlight illuminance for common and pallid swifts, i.e. when moon illuminance increased flight height also increased, while a moonlight-driven response is absent in alpine swifts. We show a weak relationship between night-time illuminance-driven responses and twilight ascending behaviour, suggesting a decoupling of both crepuscular and night-time behaviour. We suggest that swifts optimize their flight behaviour to adapt to favourable night-time light conditions, driven by light-responsive and size-dependent vertical insect stratification and weather conditions.

Keywords: flight altitude; foraging; light pollution; migration; night-time schedule; resource and habitat use.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Birds* / physiology
  • Flight, Animal* / physiology
  • Insecta