Source: Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
In the aftermath of Super Typhoon Lekima, which struck mainland China in early August 2019, a number of bird species were recorded in places they had never been seen before. A new study reveals the likely reason behind how they got there.
Flying creatures such as birds and insectsβsometimes known as biological scatterersβcan become trapped inside the eye of a tropical cyclone and carried along as it moves. Most studies have focused on active migration by these species, whereas only a few have used radar to track animals pinned inside a stormβs eye.
Huang et al. looked to polarimetric radar observations of Lekima as it approached land from a station located near Wenzhou, a city on Chinaβs central coast. The researchers identified biological scatterers trapped in the stormβs eye by their radar characteristics: high differential reflectivity, low cross-correlation coefficient values, and highly variable differential phase values.
By focusing on signals that fit those characteristics, the researchers watched echoes from flying species grow more prominent as Lekima drew closer to the coast. Then, just as the storm made landfall, the creaturesβ distribution within the eye changed from circular to oblong, which the researchers interpreted as exhausted birds flocking to the ground to rest. Moreover, some birds can be carried by the cyclone to a distance of several hundred kilometers away from landfall.
Comparing their results to similar data gathered from Hurricane Irene in 2011, the authors note that Lekima entrapped a higher proportion of birds, whereas Ireneβs eye contained mostly insect swarms.
Future studies using radar to observe flying animals and insects inside tropical cyclone eyes could help reveal how some invasive species move into new territory, the authors say, as well as help weather trackers distinguish meteorological signals from biological ones. (Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JG007533, 2023)
βNathaniel Scharping (@nathanielscharp), Science Writer