18 September 2015
Here’s a bird I see in Maine that we’ll never see in Pittsburgh.
Northern gannets (Sula bassana) nest in cliff colonies on both sides of the North Atlantic. In the fall the Canadian population visits the Gulf of Maine on their way south for the winter. The adults will spend October to April off the U.S. Atlantic coast while the juveniles may winter as far south as the Gulf coast.
Gannets are large seabirds (6.5 foot wingspan) that catch fish by plunge-diving from 30 to 130 feet above the sea. When the fishing is good a huge flock gathers overhead, diving over and over again. The video shows their amazing fishing technique, both in the air and underwater.
And, yes, these birds are moving fast. They hit the water’s surface at 60 to 75 miles an hour! Gannets can do this safely because they have no external nostrils and their faces and chests have air sacs that cushion their brains and bodies like bubble wrap.
Watch them plunge like arrows into the sea.
(video from the Smithsonian Channel on YouTube)
That is amazing…it looks like it is raining birds. That would be a sight to see in person. I noticed that at the 1:10 mark on the video, it looks like a dolphin also joins the feeding frenzy.
Maybe not in Pgh, but there was one flying up the Susquehanna in Harrisburg 3 years ago after Hurricane Sandy!
http://www.nemesisbird.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/IMG_4428-700×433.jpg