Birds Avoid Mid-Air Collisions By Following These Two Simple Rules

While studying new technologies for drones, researchers discovered the instincts that keep birds from colliding.

The听experience is familiar to everyone.听You're walking down a听crowded sidewalk,听see that you're about to walk into another person听head-on, and then you both听engage in a听graceless left-right-left samba. It's an听awkward encounter that seems听avoidable, and听if people were more like birds, it would be. That's according to听听that听describes听two simple but crucial adaptations that allow birds to fly in dense flocks without colliding.听听

The scientists听responsible for the study are听from Australia鈥檚 University of Queensland,听and as part of the team's听research, they've听been听looking to the natural world听for ways to听develop听drones that can听avoid mid-air collisions as the skies听get more crowded. Birds, they听thought, might provide some good lessons.听

"Given that head-on collisions have rarely been observed or reported in birds, we decided to ask whether birds use strategies to avoid them," said听Mandyam V.听听Srinivasan, the head of the research group,听in an email. 听

To uncover the birds'听internal programming, the researchers听constructed a 70-foot-long tunnel outfitted with bright lights so that the test subjects鈥攎ale Budgerigars or 鈥渂udgies鈥濃攃ould easily see each other. Using听high-speed video cameras to capture every movement, they then released a bird at each end of the tunnel and recorded their near-misses as the budgies barreled towards each other.

Over the course of four days, seven budgie pairs made 102 flights with no mishaps. And when the researchers reviewed the video, they saw that the birds avoided any听aerial mishaps听thanks to two evolutionary traits. About 85 percent of the time, the birds turned right upon approach.听"This seems to be a simple, efficient and effective strategy for avoiding head-on collisions,"听Srinivasan said.听

The budgies听also seemed to decide whether to fly over or under an approaching bird, and the pairs rarely made the same choice鈥攁 secondary level of compexity humans don't have to worry about on the sidewalk. How the bird's听make these听decisions is an open question; the researchers speculate that either each budgie prefers one flying height over the other, or flock hierarchy determines who flies high and who flies low.

For Srinivasan and his team, the results听weren't a complete听surprise.听"It is known, for example, that aircraft pilots are taught to veer to the right when they perceive an imminent head-on collision with another aircraft," he said. "But it was interesting to discover that biology has invented this rule millions of years ago."听

Why humans haven't adapted a similar strategy isn't clear. Srinivasan says that it could be because we haven't lived in high-density living situations听long enough to develop such听instincts, or possibly because head-on collisions听at walking speeds are rarely fatal鈥攁nd thus not a听high priority evolutionarily speaking.听

Either way,听there's听no question getting caught in one of these tangles can leave听you feeling silly, so maybe this is a trick humans听should borrow from birds.听The听next time you're on the sidewalk and find yourself in such a situation,听go right. Hopefully others will catch on听and a movement will begin.听