(Photo by Michael Shafer via the )
Birds will soon be donning a new fashion trend as they set off on migration. Researchers have been suiting up birds with tiny backpacks 鈥攖racking their movements across oceans and continents with solar-powered transmitters. But these latest backpacks will be looking to a new source for their energy: the birds themselves.
The trick is designing an energy source for the backpacks that is light enough for birds to tote. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 put a 9-volt battery on a bird, so you need a lightweight energy source,鈥 Michael Shafer, a doctoral candidate in Cornell鈥檚 , told the Cornell Chronicle. To that end, the lab is building a device that will be powered by the birds鈥 own motion.
So far, Shafer is testing the backpacks on pigeons, which can only carry about 0.4 ounces鈥攁 little more than a dollar coin. Any more weight and the pigeons can鈥檛 right themselves after twisting or rolling midflight.
The removable backpacks are equipped with a tiny computer and memory storage, an accelerometer (to measure the birds鈥 acceleration), a wireless receiver, and, finally, the gadget that will convert the energy produced by the birds鈥 motion into electricity.
The backpacks will give ornithologists an alternative to the solar-powered trackers they currently use鈥攈elpful during the daytime, not so much after sunset. The new energy source can power the tracking sensors for longer, since it doesn鈥檛 depend on sunlight. Researchers can then chart the birds鈥 flight to learn more about how their migratory patterns by climate change.
The backpacks鈥攐r, as the lab calls them, 鈥淟ab on a Bird鈥濃攁re being funded by the NSF. No word yet on whether they will come in any fashionable designs.
Related Stories:
By Scott Weidensaul
By Jhaneel Lockhart
By Kenn Kaufman