Friday, April 19, 2024

Study maps where golden eagles are safe from wind turbines

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top of a windmill on blue sky

Researchers have completed a novel study that aims to keep help the wind farm industry avoid protected golden eagles. Wind turbine blades kill up to 100,000 birds per year, which is admittedly a small percentage compared to those killed by your cat. Still, the golden eagle is particularly susceptible, considering that around 100 individuals were killed last year by a single wind farm in Altamont, California — and there are only 500 breeding pairs in the state. The new study posits a simple idea: Why not plot both golden eagle habitats and the areas with the best wind farm potential, and make sure the areas don’t intersect?

University of Waterloo and Colorado State U researchers pulled nesting data from various regions in Wyoming, which has second highest golden eagle population in the US. The state is also the fifth largest producer of wind power, so they plotted regions with the highest wind-development potential. The result is a study that shows the best regions for both turbines and established golden eagle nests (below, with the ideal areas in blue). The authors note that no existing wind farms are located in the green regions most preferred by the birds. However, there are many turbines located in the orange areas that have less-than-ideal winds but plenty of eagles.

Spatial delineation of overlay between seven NREL wind power classes (WPC; 1-low wind value, 7-high wind value) and regional resource selection function maps grouped into seven geometric bins (see Fig 4 for color legend).Hatched areas are predicted low value for golden eagle nesting and wind development.

Though golden eagles aren’t the only birds threatened by wind farms, the study’s authors hope that such a well-known species will grab the public’s imagination and spur cooperation between land-management agencies and industry. More concretely, the maps also provide wind farm developers with extra information to help them avoid the protected eagles. “Our work shows that it’s possible to guide development of sustainable energy projects, while having the least impact on wildlife populations,” said Waterloo professor Brad Fedy.

[Lede image credit: Shutterstock / cristovao]

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Source:
PLOS One

Tags: conservation, GoldenEagle, greenenergy, RenewableEnergy, Wildlife, WindTurbine

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