
‘Astonishing journeys': online tool tracking migratory animals highlights challenge of protecting them
Humpback whales move through Moreton Bay off the Brisbane coast in Australia, on their way to feed around the Balleny Islands more than 4,000km away off the Antarctic coastline, where wandering albatross circle above, travelling 1,000km a day.
In the Netherlands, Arctic terns set off from breeding colonies on one of the bird kingdom's longest migrations – a 90,000km round trip, to east Antarctica and back again.
It is hard for plodding, land-bound Homo sapiens to fathom the distances covered by these species, or their total disregard for the perils of the high seas, or the country boundaries humans have drawn.
But all these journeys, and many hundreds more, have been brought together for the first time in a new online tool that reveals the movements of more than 100 species that migrate across the planet's oceans.
'They're absolutely astonishing journeys and they're far more common than we give them credit for. All sorts of species do this,' says Daniel Dunn, an associate professor and director of the University of Queensland's Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science.
Get Guardian Australia environment editor Adam Morton's Clear Air column as an email
'Some of these birds spend less energy flying than they do standing on the ground. They can sleep while they're flying, somehow putting half their brain to sleep while the other half is paying attention.'
Almost half of all species that migrate over or in the ocean are feared to be in decline – and they are presenting conservationists with a unique and confounding challenge. How can a country help save a species that spends its time feeding or breeding in one place, if that same species is put under threat when it leaves?
One study, for example, found nine threatened migrating shorebird species that visit Australia each year are being hunted while they travel.
Dunn and his colleagues have been working on the problem, reviewing more than 1,000 studies on the movements of migratory species and then loading the best of the data into a public web system known as Mico (Migratory Connectivity in the Ocean).
The system, detailed in an article in the scientific journal Nature Communications, is the first attempt to give policymakers a clear idea of where species go, how they are connected and what it will take to save them.
Dr Lily Bentley, a marine conservation ecologist specialising in migratory species and lead author of the article, said the Mico system was also useful for seeing what is not known about migratory species.
What the system shows, rather than a comprehensive map of all migratory animals, is the first attempt to synthesise all the studies that have tracked species.
For example, Mico shows the vast global distribution of blue whales – the places where the biggest animals on Earth are known to live. But the tool also shows there have been practically no tracking studies of the whales anywhere around the entire African continent.
Bentley said it was 'very much the first step'.
'If you're at a big international meeting and someone wants to know what species goes where, now we can have an answer.'
Sign up to Clear Air Australia
Adam Morton brings you incisive analysis about the politics and impact of the climate crisis
after newsletter promotion
Conservationists and policymakers are working on two big global agreements that the Mico team hope will benefit from their work.
Dunn says one example is the '30 x 30' target – a global plan backed by more than 120 countries to protect 30% of the planet's land and ocean by 2030.
'Part of that target requires that the [protected areas] are well connected, but we are still trying to work out how we determine that.
'We can't wait, because the stresses on the animals are not waiting. We need to provide that initial information.'
A second global deal, adopted in 2023 after 20 years of negotiations, is a treaty looking to increase the number of protected areas in the high seas.
'These two things could be amazing for migratory species if we get the areas right,' said Bentley.
'Migratory species move between jurisdictions, so you have to bring more and more people to the table and that's a hard thing to do.
'[Mico] takes us a step further to making sure we're telling policymakers which areas of the high seas are important to protect.'
Rebecca Hubbard is the global director of the High Seas Alliance, a group of more than 60 non-governmental organisations working on the high seas treaty.
Hubbard, who attended a presentation of the Mico system this week, said it would help, 'particularly on the high seas that are half of our planet and two-thirds of the ocean'.
'We're now having to conserve our species on a global scale. We always need more data, but we also need to be able to see patterns in that data. [Mico] is incredibly useful in translating a lot of individual bits of information into a broader signal.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
4 hours ago
- The Sun
Prolonged hot weather may be fuelling rise in obesity rates, study suggests
BLAME your belly on the sunshine, say scientists - as hot weather makes us gain weight. A study in Australia estimated that someone's risk of being obese increases by 0.2 per cent for every day of the year that is warmer than 30C. Sweltering summer days might slow our metabolism by wrecking our sleep, put us off exercising, and have us reaching for fattening fizzy drinks to cool off. The UK has enjoyed an early start to summer this year, with eleven 30C days so far. The Met Office says 2025 is one of only three years on record to have had so many by July – with 2018 and 1976. Research led by the University of Adelaide compared rates of obesity and weather across eight Australian states between 2006 and 2022. It found citizens in the hottest areas were more likely to be obese and as an area's temperatures increased so did the number of fat people. Writing in the journal Economics & Human Biology, the study authors said: 'High temperatures can make outdoor activities and physical activities less appealing, leading to a sedentary lifestyle which has been shown to increase obesity. 'Further, extreme temperatures can cause heat-related sleep disturbances that influence metabolism. 'Temperature shocks can also affect the body's metabolism and appetite. 'High temperatures may suppress appetite in the short term, but can also lead to increased consumption of high-calorie, sugary beverages for cooling and hydration.' Two thirds of British adults are overweight and about 30 per cent are obese, raising their risk of cancer, dementia and heart diseases. I put my 11-year-old daughter on fat jabs after she got bullied for her weight - people judge me but I don't care The researchers suggested people in areas that are normally cold – such as the UK – might be more vulnerable. They added: 'We find that the effects of extreme temperature on obesity are more pronounced for people living in states with general cold climates and for older people compared to younger people.' 1


Reuters
10 hours ago
- Reuters
SpaceX launches joint astronaut crew to ISS in NASA's Crew-11 mission
WASHINGTON, Aug 1 (Reuters) - An international crew of four astronauts launched toward the International Space Station from Florida on Friday aboard a SpaceX rocket, beating gloomy weather to embark on a routine NASA mission that could be the first of many to last a couple months longer than usual. The four-person astronaut crew - two NASA astronauts, a Russian cosmonaut and Japanese astronaut - boarded SpaceX's Dragon capsule sitting atop its Falcon 9 rocket at NASA's Kennedy Space Center and blasted off at 11:43 am ET (1543 GMT). They will arrive at the ISS on Saturday.


Daily Mail
11 hours ago
- Daily Mail
That's not a stick it's a branch! New species of supersized stick insect discovered in Australia
A giant new species of stick insect with a supersized wingspan has been discovered in a remote rainforest in Australia. The stick insect, which is around 40cm (15.75 inches) long, was discovered in high-altitude trees in the mountainous Wet Tropics region of North Queensland. The female specimen weighed 44g, less than a golf ball, but significantly heftier than Australia's heaviest insect, the giant wood moth, which gets up to 30g. Footage shows the incredible wingspan of the stick insect, which is a similar length to a small bird. The new species, named Acrophylla alta, is roughly the same size as a barn owl or a wood pigeon. James Cook University's Angus Emmott, who helped identify the species, said the creature's large size could be an evolutionary response to its cool, wet habitat. He said: 'Their body mass likely helps them survive the colder conditions, and that's why they've developed into this large insect over millions of years.' The remote habitat was probably also why it had remained undiscovered for so long, Emmott added. Emmott continued: 'They live high up in the rainforest canopy, and accessing that is almost impossible. 'You've got to wait until, for instance, a bird knocks one down or you get a big storm and they get knocked down. It's very, very hard to find them in situ.' He added that while females have wings, they are 'not really great flyers' because of their 'heavy bodies'. The next step in identifying and eventually naming the species is finding a male, which is proving difficult, and not just because they are as thin as a stick. Male stick insects tend to be significantly smaller and are so visually distinct from females that they have previously been regarded not only as a different species, but as a different genus altogether. Emmott said: 'You really need to find the male copulating with the female. 'You know what it is then, and you collect the eggs and you can actually ascertain that they're one of the same thing.' The eggs of the newly-discovered stick insect were key to its identification, as no two species' eggs are the same. Emmott said: 'Every species of stick insect has their own distinct egg style. 'They've all got different surfaces and different textures and pitting, and they can be different shapes. Even the caps on them are all very unique.' The stick insect specimen, along with another female, are now in the Queensland Museum's collection. Stick insects tend to be quite still in daylight hours to avoid being preyed on by birds, so researchers traipse through the rainforest at night with head torches for the best chance of glimpsing them. Currently, their average lifespan remains uncertain. Emmott said: 'We don't actually don't know that yet, but I imagine only a couple of years maximum. 'Because, yes, there's a lot of pressure on them with birds looking for them and eating them all the time, and I guess that's why they're so cryptic.' The depth and density of life in Queensland's rainforests mean untold numbers of insect species remain undefined or undiscovered. Emmott continued: 'Up here in the tropics, in northern Australia, we've got so many insects that are as yet undescribed. 'For instance, I've got an undescribed cicada in the garden here that a friend of mine is in the process of describing, and I've been working on the moths up here as quite a number of them are undescribed.'