WHERE DO SWIFTS LIVE?

In the ancient world, some believed that swifts resided in the heavens, somewhere above the clouds. You find swifts across the globe, mainly in subtropical and tropical lands. Swifts migrate thousands of miles during winter from the cold areas in the north to warm climates. Swifts seldom land on level ground because their short legs and hook-like feet do not allow them to beat their wings to lift off the ground.

Eurasian Swift
Eurasian Swift
Swift nest in cave
Swift nest in cave

They prefer to perch on vertical surfaces such as rocks, caves, and walls of buildings. They make nests on buildings, caves and even plant leaves by gluing together twigs, leaves or sticks using their saliva. The edible-nest swiftlet makes nests entirely from its hardened saliva.

Recent posts

Diploptera punctuate cockroach's milk offers four times more nutrients than a cow's milk.

August 10, 2018
Wolf spiders prefer green color shades because it is more comfortable for them to catch prey and mate against green backgrounds.

August 8, 2018
Wrens are songbirds found in Australia, which are able to learn the language of other neighbors. Researchers taught the birds to recognize two previously unknown sounds to them as distress calls by playing them in conjunction with the wrens' alarm call, which the wrens associated with danger. After three days, the birds run for cover when they heard the strange sound they learned.

August 5, 2018

August 1, 2018
A lizard can shed off its tail when in danger.

July 29, 2018
Wolf spiders that live in the Arctic tundra enjoy eating the springtails, but spiders lose appetite them during summer the temperatures are warmer. The springtails feed on fungus, which in turn decomposes melting land matter to form form carbon dioxide and methane. The two gases are responsible to global warming, which means that the more wolf spiders feed on alternative food sources the better for global warming.

July 27, 2018

Join us on social media or subscribe!

Sign up to receive our articles in your inbox!

Enter your name and email address below to subscribe.