First off, best of the season to everyone!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xKGBcAyZ3g&feature=youtu.be

I captured this amazing footage yesterday.  These surf scoters, a kind of duck 
wintering here on the west coast, show interesting clustering patterns.  They 
align direction and increase density as they travel between feeding locations.  
At feeding locations they spread out and dive in various directions for food.  
When their feeding opportunities are exhausted in one area, they increase 
density again, align in a common direction, and high-tail it, so to speak, to 
the next good feeding area.  It seems to me these alignment and density changes 
are clear phase transitions, and the high density clusters (when they are 
aligned in direction) appear to involve a wake-following/hydrodynamic mechanism 
to optimize travel time and energy expenditure.  They generally travel at 
angles to each other, and not directly behind. 

After capturing this video yesterday on a relatively poor camera, I decided to 
buy a better HDD camera today and a monopod, for some better footage today.  
While a technical camera glitch means I have no additional footage from today, 
much to my chagrin, I did see some fantastic formations of a much larger flock 
of scoters (perhaps 1000), including an arc formation in which they fan out in 
a curve of one bird beside each other, perhaps acting something like a net, 
covering as much area as possible in search of food.  I also saw tell-tale 
signs of a convection pattern whereby following birds, in what I surmise to be 
zones of lower energy expenditure, pass leading birds in zones of higher energy 
expenditure, creating a rotational pattern. This is the sort of convection 
dynamic,very apparent in bicycle pelotons, that I have so much wanted to 
document in natural collectives.  It was unfortunate that I ended up with no 
additional footage today, but it looks like I will get some more opportunities, 
as the birds are likely to be around for a while. 

While there are published papers discussing scoter migratory and foraging 
patterns, from what I could see there are no published papers discussing in 
detail these fascinating clustering formations.



Hugh Trenchard

Victoria, BC
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