Article 6JNDF Stories of Weird Animal Behavior During an Eclipse

Stories of Weird Animal Behavior During an Eclipse

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#6JNDF)
Story Image

Cameron Duke of MinuteEarth explains how a solar eclipse may have an odd effect on the behavior of some animals, while others simply return to places where they feel most safe. This type of information is anecdotal at best due to the long intervals between such events.

First, there's the issue of sample size. Total solar eclipses only occur about once every18 months, and each one only covers a small swath of the planet at a time. As a result,specific places can go more than 100 years between eclipse experiences,making repeated observations of animals in thesame habitat challenging, to say the least.

With this in mind, reports can vary and even outright contradict one another.

It's not surprising that some studiescompletely contradict each other, like this one,which found that black-crowned night herons make a ton of possibly-anxious noise during an eclipse,and this one, which says that black-crowned night herons stay silent during an eclipse.

Either way, the animals will respond as they do during a solar eclipse without human intervention, like the eclipse taking place on April 8, 2024, but how we react as humans is certainly within our control.

And that brings us to the issue of, well, us. We're primed to expect that animalsmight do something weird during an eclipse ...Eclipses can invokefear and anxiety, or excitement and wonder in our own species, so perhaps it's naturalto expect - or even hope - that other creatures are sharing a piece of that experience with us.

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://laughingsquid.com/feed/
Feed Title Laughing Squid
Feed Link https://laughingsquid.com/
Reply 0 comments