Roadrunners Run in the Desert

Roadrunners Run in the Desert

In the Warner Bros. cartoons, the Road Runner was always outrunning and outsmarting Wile E. Coyote. In real life, roadrunners can run up to 20 miles (32 km) per hour. Although they can fly, when not escaping predators, roadrunners spend most of their time on the ground. There are two species. The greater roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) lives in the deserts of the southwestern United States and Mexico. The lesser roadrunner (Geococcyx velox) lives in Mexico and Central America. 

Roadrunners are members of the cuckoo family, and like other cuckoos, they have four toes, with two facing forward and two facing backward. When they run through the dust of the desert, they leave tracks that resemble the letter “X,” making it difficult to tell which way they are going. The greater roadrunner is almost 2 feet (60 cm) long from head to tail. The lesser roadrunner is smaller. They eat nearly anything they can find in the desert, even scorpions and snakes. Due to their speed in capturing prey, the greater roadrunner can eat poisonous snakes, including rattlesnakes. 

In the cartoons, the Road Runner makes a sound like “beep beep.” Real roadrunners sound more like the cooing of a dove. Roadrunners don’t migrate, and they stay in their breeding area year-round. They are monogamous and mate for life, with the male and female taking turns incubating the eggs and caring for the young. 

Regardless of what happens to Wyle E. Coyote, he always comes back to try to capture the elusive Road Runner. Desert life is a delicately balanced system. Life in the real desert may not be as funny as in the cartoons, but it’s worth learning about because God’s creations are always fascinating. 

— Roland Earnst © 2025


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