BBC World Service broadcast: 6th June 2016
One of the great wonders of the natural world is in deep trouble.
Millions
of shorebirds fly from Australia and Southeast Asia to the Arctic every
year. They follow the planet’s most gruelling migratory route – the
East Asian Australasian Flyway.
Join Ann Jones as she watches
wading birds such as curlews, godwits and sandpipers prepare for their
epic journey. They fatten up on clams to the point of obesity, to fuel
the flight. They grow bigger hearts and flight muscles. Just before
departure, they shrink their digestive organs to become the most
efficient flying machines for their first 7 day non-stop flight.
The
birds’ lives are full of danger and the most serious threats are
man-made. The flyway is in peril with many species plummeting towards
extinction. As you’ll hear, it’s enough to make a grown man cry.
The series is a co-production from the BBC World Service and Australian ABC Radio National.
Image: Waders readying to migrate north at Roebuck Bay, Western Australia, Copyright: Ann Jones
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