A team of scientists has discovered that endangered Cape gannets, which live and breed in large colonies in southern Africa, use unique dances that could show mates and neighbours where to find food.
In this scene from EARTHFLIGHT: Africa, Cape gannets fly off the coast of South Africa in search of the great sardine run, the biggest fish migration in the world. The birds dive into the ocean to ...
The beautiful Cape Gannet, an iconic species of the local coastline that has lent its name (in Afrikaans, Malgas) to places like Malgas Island in Saldanha Bay and the village on the Breede River, is ...
ABSTRACT: Seabirds respond to environmental changes by adjusting their breeding and foraging strategies, but this behavioural flexibility has limits. Cape gannets Morus capensis breeding in the ...
https://doi.org/10.2307/1521365 • https://www.jstor.org/stable/1521365 Copy URL Young Cape Gannets (Morus capensis) were banded at Bird Island, Algoa Bay, South ...
These photographs reveal one of nature's greatest phenomena - the annual sardine run. Millions of the fish move north along the coast of South Africa where they are eaten by dolphins, sharks and ...
Whatever twists an Olympic diver does in the air, by the time she hits the water her position is always with hands held in a point to break the water and head tucked between her arms. It is quite ...
A team of scientists has discovered that endangered Cape gannets, which live and breed in large colonies in southern Africa, use unique dances that could show mates and neighbours where to find food.
These photographs reveal one of nature's greatest phenomena - the annual sardine run. Millions of the fish move north along the coast of South Africa where they are eaten by dolphins, sharks and ...