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Do birds and bees dance to the same tune?

by Roger Bagula <rlbagula@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Oct 26, 2007 at 07:23 AM

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=143&art_id=nw20071025010512263C270156
Do birds and bees dance to the same tune?

Paris - A clutch of scientific studies showing that the foraging 
patterns of albatrosses, bumblebees and deer conform to a single 
mathematical axiom all got it wrong, researchers said on Wednesday.

The new work overturns a cornerstone study from 1996 claiming that the 
airborne seabirds trace an elegant pattern known as Levy flights, named 
after the French mathematician who first described them.

It also upends or casts a long shadow over a slew of follow-on studies 
by biologists seeking to extend the albatross findings to other animals, 
including bees, reindeer, grey seals, spider monkeys and microscopic 
zoo-plankton.

One study even found evidence of Levy flights in the peregrinations of 
Peruvian fishing boats chasing down anchovies off the coast of South 
America.

If all this published research turns out to be baseless - as now seems 
likely - it raises the intriguing and troubling question of how so many 
scientists working independently could have gone so badly astray.

Lead author Andrew Edward, a research scientist at the Canadian 
government's fisheries and oceans department, uncovered two problems 
with the study on albatrosses, only one of which affected subsequent 
research.

The first was simply an error in the raw data collected from tracking 
devices attached to the birds, which were mistakenly thought to be in 
the air when they were, for much of the time, soaking up the sun while 
sitting on rocks.

The more important error, however, was in methodology, which is what 
started the chain-reaction of mistakes.

Edwards has proposed another calculation based on more sophisticated 
statistical methods for testing whether Levy flights really apply, even 
if he is sceptical that the initial results will hold.

His critique, published in the British journal Nature, in no way 
suggests that the studies called into question were fraudulent, only 
that they recovered a statistical method of calculation that turned out 
to be wrong.

The system of peer-reviewed publication - whereby prestigious scientific 
journals ask experts to vet article submissions - is intended to prevent 
dubious or dodgy scholarship from getting into print.

Edwards is reluctant to draw hasty conclusions but did suggest in a 
phone interview one possible explanation for the cavalcade of scientific 
error.

"If you are a biologist going out collecting data for four months on 
some animal it is hard to spend the time reading all the theoretical 
literature, so you use a method that others have already used," he said.

Another possible explanation is the well-documented human urge to find 
order and patterns - and occasionally to impose them - on observed 
phenomenon.

"Mathematics is the closest that we humans get to true magic," the 
famous British mathematician Ian Stewart once said. "How else to 
describe the patters in our head that - by some mysterious agency - 
capture patterns of the universe around us?"

A celebrated case of science bent out of shape by wishful thinking 
occurred in the United States in the late 1980s.

When two respected scientists claimed to have achieved cold fusion - the 
spontaneous creation of thermonuclear energy - an era of unlimited 
energy seemed to be at hand.

Despite widely expressed scepticism, at least two other established 
research labs in the US successfully reproduced the cold fusion results 
before it was clearly proven that the whole thing was an illusion.

Levy flights display the properties of fractals, geometric shapes that 
can can be subdivided in parts that are themselves a reduced-scale copy 
of the whole.

The fractal-like patterns found in nature - fern leaves, snow flakes, 
crystals and even the body's blood vessels - continue to exert a 
bewitching fascination.

AFP

Published on the Web by IOL on 2007-10-25 01:05:12
© Independent Online 2005. All rights reserved. IOL publishes this 
article in good faith but is not liable for any loss or damage caused by 
reliance on the information it contains.
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=143&art_id=nw20071025010512263C270156

[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Oct-2007
[ | E-mail Article ]

Contact: Athena Dinar
a.dinar@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Antarctic Survey
Animal behavior study overturned

An international team of scientists has overturned an ecological study 
on how some animals search for food. Previously it was believed that 
wandering albatrosses and other species forage using a Lévy flight 
strategy - a cluster of short moves connected by infrequent longer ones. 
Published this week in the journal Nature, the team discovered that 
further analyses and new data tell a different story for the albatrosses 
and possibly for other species too.

Biologists and physicists identified ‘Lévy flights’, named after the 
French mathematician Paul Lévy, as an efficient way for animals to 
search for sparse food. They have been attributed to a wide range of 
organisms, including zooplankton, grey seals, spider monkeys and even 
Peruvian fisherman.

The first attempt to demonstrate their existence in a natural biological 
system suggested that wandering albatrosses perform Lévy flights when 
searching for prey on the ocean surface - a finding followed by similar 
inferences about the search strategies of deer and bumblebees. However, 
this research shows this is not the case. Based on new high-resolution 
data collected from loggers attached to the legs of wandering 
albatrosses on the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia, the team show 
that the previous claims about the Lévy flight behaviour were unfounded. 
They also re-analysed the existing data sets for deer and bumblebees 
using new statistical methods, again finding that none exhibits evidence 
of Lévy flights.

“It now seems the albatrosses come across food at simpler random 
intervals”, says lead author Dr Andrew Edwards from British Antarctic 
Survey (now at Fisheries and Oceans Canada). “Our work also questions 
whether other animals thought to exhibit Lévy flights really do all 
forage in the same way.”

This research improves scientists’ understanding of the foraging 
behaviour of the wandering albatross – an endangered species. It may 
also help develop a new theory for how animals forage – an essential 
piece in the wider ecological jigsaw puzzle.

###

Issued by the British Antarctic Survey Press Office.

Athena Dinar – tel: ++44 1223 221414, mob:07740 822229, email: 
a.dinar@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Capper – tel: ++44 1223 221448, mob: 07714 233744, email: 
l.capper@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 contact:

Dr Andrew Edwards, Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans 
Canada, Nanaimo, BC, Canada. (Formerly at British Antarctic Survey). 
Tel: +1 250 756 7146 (work), +1 250 716 8997 (home). From 21– 28 
October: tel: +1 250 385 2405 (a hotel in Victoria, BC). Email: 
EdwardsAnd@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Mervyn Freeman, British Antarctic Survey, tel. ++44 (0) 1223 221543, 
Mobile: 07722 530279, email: m.freeman@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Nick Watkins, British Antarctic Survey, tel. ++44 (0) 1223 221545, 
mobile: +44 (0) 7786 677 724, email: n.watkins@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Gandhi Viswanathan, Universidade Federal de Alagoas, tel. ++ (82) 
32141427, email: Gandhi.Viswanathan@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 for Editors

Still images and video (DV-cam) are available of albatrosses at British 
Antarctic Survey’s Bird Island Research Station. Please contact the BAS 
press office as above.

Revisiting Lévy flight search patterns of wandering albatrosses, 
bumblebees and deer by Andrew M. Edwards, Richard A. Phillips, Nicholas 
W. Watkins, Mervyn P. Freeman, Eugene J. Murphy, Vsevolod Afanasyev, 
Sergey V. Buldyrev, M.G.E da Luz, E. P. Raposo, H. Eugene Stanley, 
Gandhi M. Viswanathan is published in the journal Nature on Thursday 25 
October 2007.

Organisations involved in this research: British Antarctic Survey, 
Boston University (US), Yeshiva University (US), Universidade Federal do 
Parana (Brazil), Universidade Federal de Pernambuco (Brazil), 
Universidade Federal de Alagoas (Brazil).

A Lévy flight is named after the French mathematician Paul Pierre Lévy 
and is a type of random walk in which increments are distributed 
according to a probability distribution with a heavy power law tail.

The work at BAS forms part of the COMPLEXITY and DISCOVERY 2010 science 
programmes at BAS. NATURAL COMPLEXITY provides a new perspective on, and 
understanding of, complicated natural phenomena including biological 
food webs, animal foraging and iceberg calving. DISCOVERY 2010 is 
investigating and describing the response of an ocean ecosystem to 
climate variability, climate change and commercial exploitation.

The original study was published in Nature in 1996 based on albatross 
data collected from Bird Island Research Station in 1992. Another Nature 
paper in 1999 developed this idea further using data from bumblebees and 
deer and using computer simulation.

The wandering albatrosses inhabit Bird Island, a 5km-long rocky island 
off South Georgia in the South Atlantic Ocean. With no food to be found 
on the island, the birds undertake long foraging trips, flying close to 
the ocean surface to spot and feed on squid. Loggers attached to the 
birds’ legs tell ecologists how often the birds land on the water to feed.

Estimates suggest that 300,000 seabirds are killed annually in the 
world’s long-line fisheries, many of which are albatrosses. Since 2001, 
by-catch rates in well-regulated fisheries have decreased substantially, 
remained stable in less well-regulated ones and probably increased in 
pirate fisheries, for which no real data exist. 19 of the 21 species of 
albatross are threatened with extinction.

British Antarctic Survey is a world leader in research into global 
issues in an Antarctic context. It is the UK’s national operator and is 
a component of the Natural Environment Research Council 
(www.nerc.ac.uk). It has an annual budget of around £40 million, runs 
nine research programmes and operates five research stations, two Royal 
Research Ships and five aircraft in and around Antarctica. More 
information about the work of the Survey can be found at: 
www.antarctica.ac.uk

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

Fisheries and Oceans Canada is the lead federal government department 
responsible for developing and implementing policies and programs in 
support of Canada's economic, ecological and scientific interests in 
oceans and inland waters.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail Article ]




 2 Posts in Topic:
Do birds and bees dance to the same tune?
Roger Bagula <rlbagula  2007-10-26 07:23:45 
Re: Do birds and bees dance to the same tune?
Roger Bagula <rlbagula  2007-12-17 18:41:29 

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