In 1875, 12.5 trillion animals engulfed the Rocky Mountains. Is ‘Albert’s swarm’ the largest wildlife gathering ever?

In 1875, 12.5 trillion animals engulfed the Rocky Mountains. Is ‘Albert’s swarm’ the largest wildlife gathering ever?

Known as Albert's swarm, a plague of locusts covered the Midwestern USA and wreaked havoc


People love a party. But as populous as our species is, the headcounts at our gatherings don’t match those of other species.

The Maha Kumbh Mela, a Hindu pilgrimage in Prayagraj, India, drew more than 660 million people in January 2025. But this horde – thought to be the largest in human history – pales in comparison to the groups formed by our animal relatives.

The largest animal gatherings in the world likely occur in the chilly depths surrounding Antarctica. The Southern Ocean is home to Antarctic krill – tiny crustaceans that form swarms more than 20km long. A single swarm may contain trillions of individuals. Krill are a crucial food source for other organisms, including fish, penguins and whales.

The largest recorded terrestrial gathering is believed to be the so-called Albert’s swarm of 1875. Recorded by physician Albert Child, it constituted an estimated 12.5 trillion Rocky Mountain locusts, a now-extinct species of grasshopper. The cloud of insects covered some 512,800km² of the Midwestern USA. Even if Child’s methodology for estimating the numbers was likely to be off, locusts do form some of the largest animal gatherings on the planet. A locust plague in East Africa and parts of Asia that lasted from 2019–22 saw swarms of up to 70 billion individuals.

Other animal gatherings are comparatively modest. Vertebrate animals generally reproduce more slowly and thus do not match the astonishing population surges of their spineless relatives. Still, their numbers can be impressive.

A 482km-long flock of now-extinct passenger pigeons observed in 1866 comprised some 3.5 billion birds. And red-billed queleas, the most numerous species of bird on Earth, form flocks that number in the millions, which earn them the nickname ‘feathered locust’.

Schools of Atlantic herring may number in the billions. And while their habits are not well understood, bristlemouths, a group of 32 species of fish in the family Gonostomatidae, are the world’s most numerous vertebrate. These bioluminescent fish inhabit the ocean’s twilight zone and number up to a quadrillion individuals globally. It’s not unreasonable to assume that trillions may school or shoal at once.

It is worth noting that many of these numbers are estimations and extrapolations, and rest on ambiguous semantics. What is a flock or a school, for example? These categories can be as amorphous as the gatherings they define – flocks and schools merge and separate. But the species described do congregate in staggering numbers, however we choose to describe them.

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Top image: locust swarm. Credit: Getty

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