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Diving Birds Are Dense

Diving Birds Are Dense

Designed for speed and agility under the waves.

BirdNote Daily

January 16, 20261m 45s

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Show Notes

While many birds have hollow bones that make flying a breeze, diving birds are built differently. The bones of divers such as Common Loons are denser than those of songbirds and other expert fliers. With a lightweight skeleton, they’d be too buoyant to dive and chase fish. Instead, loons can kick their powerful legs and webbed feet to swim 200 feet or more underwater!

More info and transcript at BirdNote.org.

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Topics

birdingsciencebirds