
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Seabirds have no problem drinking sea water. The salt they take in is absorbed and moves through their blood stream into a pair of salt glands above their eyes. The densely salty fluid is excreted from the nostrils and runs down grooves in the bill. As the drop gets larger, the bird shakes its head to send the salt back to the ocean. A seabird's skull has a pair of grooves for the salt glands right over the eyes. Learn more at BirdNote.org.
By BirdNote4.8
12101,210 ratings
Seabirds have no problem drinking sea water. The salt they take in is absorbed and moves through their blood stream into a pair of salt glands above their eyes. The densely salty fluid is excreted from the nostrils and runs down grooves in the bill. As the drop gets larger, the bird shakes its head to send the salt back to the ocean. A seabird's skull has a pair of grooves for the salt glands right over the eyes. Learn more at BirdNote.org.

43,986 Listeners

38,579 Listeners

6,806 Listeners

38,831 Listeners

1,487 Listeners

6,422 Listeners

660 Listeners

1,245 Listeners

24,509 Listeners

416 Listeners

3,427 Listeners

871 Listeners

102 Listeners

1,243 Listeners

1,743 Listeners

173 Listeners

49 Listeners

172 Listeners

14 Listeners