This little bird with its 20-inch wingspan weighs about as much as a stick of butter, but it has the stamina of an Olympian. Each fall, red knots are known to fly more than 9,000 miles from the Arctic to South America–and in the spring, they do the journey in reverse, for a roundtrip of more than 20,000 miles. The most famous red knot, known as ‘Moonbird,’ is so named because the total of its known migrations have exceeded the distance to the moon. Moonbird was first banded in Rio Grande, Argentina, in 1995 and has been sighted many times in the years after–amazing scientists and birders alike.
A red knot on the Shetland Islands, Scotland
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
International Day of the Snow Leopard
-
Walk the line
-
Barn owl, England
-
Happy Mother s Day
-
Tall, taller, tallest
-
Astrotourism at its finest
-
Fallen but not forgotten
-
Kochia, Hitachi, Ibaraki prefecture, Japan
-
Bamburgh Castle, Northumberland, England
-
Loud waters
-
With leaves this tasty, who cares about a view?
-
The village of Castelluccio above the Piano Grande, Umbria, Italy
-
Springtime in the Mediterranean
-
Happy World Meteorological Day
-
Wild scene on the Merced River
-
Monarch butterflies migrate south
-
Ad-Deir, Petra, Jordan
-
The city of Osaka at night, Japan
-
The Rainbow Houses of Houten, Netherlands
-
International Day of Light
-
Mitsumata blossoms
-
Badlands National Parks 45th anniversary
-
Art and soul
-
Hanging out on a limb
-
The buzz about bees
-
50 years of World Heritage Sites
-
The Wave, Vejle, Denmark
-
Coral Reef Awareness Week
-
Naxos in the Cyclades Islands of Greece
-
Canadian Thanksgiving
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

