The Nomadic Alternative – Page 25
The Nomadic Alternative
Page 25
For mammals, birds, reptiles, insects and fish the strong
desire to wander is an imperative to go. Fins flicking, wings
beating or buzzing, feet stamping or pattering, these fearless
geographers journey to ‘far-flung Bermudas’, to seed a new genera-
tion on a beach, spawn in a mountain stream, find fresh grass or
pollinate a nocturnal flower. With the exception of molluscs and
hydroids nearly all animals activate, orient themselves and move
of their own volition to predetermined appointments with life or
death. Plants slumber in supine drowsiness.
The limpet has a home and a migration path. Locusts swarm.
Butterflies flutter across the Pacific. Breeding whales swim from
polar to tropical seas. A salmon can taste the waters of its ances-
tral river. Elvers migrate from the Sargasso Sea, as eels grow fat
and slimy in a freshwater pool, and return to their birthplace to
breed and die. Season after season the hoofprints of reindeer and
caribou follow the same appointed track. The fledgling cuckoo
follows its unknown parents to their winter quarters. Small birds
cross Alps and Cordilleras on their annual journeys. The Albatross
glides round the earth on the gales of the Roaring Forties. And
the Arctic Tern does streak from one polar ice-cap to the other.
A delicate balance between the demands of the stomach and the
compulsions of sex conditions the range of these journeys. But the
animal geographers live in a perpetual present and do not plot them
in advance. Instead they inherit a foreknowledge of the stations
on the way. Or they learn them very quickly on their first migration
and preserve them for the rest of their lives. And apart from these
interior atlases, they have innate diet-sheets and manuals of
diplomacy, defence, sexual instruction, child-rearing and house-
keeping. Some animals have all their problems solved in advance
and from birth know instinctively how to navigate through life.
Others need instruction from their parents who tune their instincts
to function correctly.
Visual memory enables migrant animals to read a landscape – its
shape, texture and plant cover. Then they have internal chronometers,
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