Physics-based simulations of aerial attacks by peregrine falcons reveal that stooping at high speed maximizes catch success against agile prey
Authored by Charlotte Hemelrijk, Hanno Hildenbrandt, Robin Mills, Graham K Taylor
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006044
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
European Research Council (ERC)
Platforms:
C++
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://gitlab.com/BirdFlightSimulator/BirdFlightSimulation.git
Abstract
The peregrine falcon Falco peregrinus is renowned for attacking its prey
from high altitude in a fast controlled dive called a stoop. Many other
raptors employ a similar mode of attack, but the functional benefits of
stooping remain obscure. Here we investigate whether, when, and why
stooping promotes catch success, using a three-dimensional, agent-based
modeling approach to simulate attacks of falcons on aerial prey. We
simulate avian flapping and gliding flight using an analytical
quasi-steady model of the aerodynamic forces and moments, parametrized
by empirical measurements of flight morphology. The model-birds' flight
control inputs are commanded by their guidance system, comprising a
phenomenological model of its vision, guidance, and control. To
intercept its prey, model-falcons use the same guidance law as missiles
(pure proportional navigation); this assumption is corroborated by
empirical data on peregrine falcons hunting lures. We parametrically
vary the falcon's starting position relative to its prey, together with
the feedback gain of its guidance loop, under differing assumptions
regarding its errors and delay in vision and control, and for three
different patterns of prey motion. We find that, when the prey maneuvers
erratically, high-altitude stoops increase catch success compared to
low-altitude attacks, but only if the falcon's guidance law is
appropriately tuned, and only given a high degree of precision in vision
and control. Remarkably, the optimal tuning of the guidance law in our
simulations coincides closely with what has been observed empirically in
peregrines. High-altitude stoops are shown to be beneficial because
their high airspeed enables production of higher aerodynamic forces for
maneuvering, and facilitates higher roll agility as the wings are
tucked, each of which is essential to catching maneuvering prey at
realistic response delays.
Tags
Sturnus-vulgaris
Avian flight
Cockatoo eolophus-roseicapillus
Maneuvering flight
Wind-tunnel
Wingbeat frequency
Metabolic power
Accipiter-nisus
Insect flight
Aerodynamics