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A wing and a prayer

Do birds ever collide? If not, why not?

Birds do collide. Thanks to all who wrote to tell of clashes between various species. Interestingly, nobody reported evidence of collisions between birds that fly in formation, such as starlings. From an evolutionary perspective it would seem to make sense for flocking birds to have collision-avoidance systems 鈥 Ed

n Yes, birds do collide in flight. Early one February morning in the early 1970s, at the start of the duck-hunting season in Victoria, Australia, I was standing waist-deep in Reedy Lake swamp near Geelong. One black swan was flying from the south and another from the north-east. They were getting closer and closer and closer鈥 鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to hit each other,鈥 I thought. Then I decided: 鈥淣o, birds don鈥檛 crash.鈥

Poof! They collided in a cloud of feathers. Both dropped a few metres, had a shake and then flew on as if nothing had happened.

鈥淚 saw two black swans collide. They dropped a few metres, had a bit of a shake, and then continued鈥

Stuart Forbes, Wensleydale, Victoria, Australia

鈥 I saw two birds collide in my garden. One was a sparrowhawk and the other a wren 鈥 arguably an attack, rather than a collision, but spectacular nonetheless. The wren eventually escaped, but obviously birds do frequently collide, especially when 鈥 as in this case 鈥 a bird of prey is involved.

Peter Scott, Hove, East Sussex, UK

Topics: Last Word

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