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:
-
World Numbat Day
-
Listening to the sea
-
Chestnut-eared aracari in the Pantanal, Brazil
-
These laurels are hardy
-
Fat Bear Week
-
Bridges to the past
-
We heart Berlin
-
A shell of many colors
-
Ingenuity in action on the Santa Monica Pier
-
Lake Peipus, Estonia
-
Sky island views
-
Falling for the Canadian Rockies
-
Pumpkin field, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
-
Labor Day
-
World Oceans Day
-
Portland celebrates its bounty
-
Lunar eclipse
-
Juneteenth
-
Sundance Film Festival opens in Park City
-
Wayag Islands in the Raja Ampat Islands of Indonesia
-
Stop and see the flowers
-
A truly American monument
-
In memory of those lost
-
That bill s just not going to fit
-
Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia
-
There was gold in them there hills…
-
Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary
-
National Park Week begins
-
Manhattan
-
American Wetlands Month
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

