Showing posts with label mass bird deaths. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mass bird deaths. Show all posts

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Massive bird kill at US wind farm

Wind power CAN be green - but it has to be bird-smart
November 2011: With the deaths of nearly 500 birds at the Laurel Mountain wind facility recently, three of the four wind farms operating in West Virginia have now experienced large bird fatality events, according to American Bird Conservancy (ABC).

Wind energy has the potential to be a green energy source, but the industry still needs to embrace simple, bird-smart principles that would dramatically reduce incidents across the country, such as those that have occurred in West Virginia,' said Kelly Fuller, ABC's wind campaign coordinator.

Lights can leave birds fatally disorientatedThere were three critical circumstances that tragically aligned in each of the three West Virginia events to kill these birds. Each occurred during bird migration season, during low visibility weather conditions, and with the addition of a deadly triggering element - an artificial light source. Steady-burning lights have been shown to attract and disorient birds, particularly night-migrating songbirds that navigate by starlight, and especially during nights where visibility is low such as in fog or inclement weather. Circling birds collide with structures or each other, or drop to the ground from exhaustion.

At the Laurel Mountain facility in the Allegheny Mountains, almost 500 birds were reportedly killed after lights were left on at an electrical substation associated with the wind project. The deaths are said to have occurred not from collisions with the wind turbines themselves, but from a combination of collisions with the substation and apparent exhaustion as birds caught in the light's glare circled in mass confusion.

More than 2,000 golden eagles killedAt the end of September, at the Mount Storm facility in the Allegheny Mountains, 59 birds and two bats were killed in one evening. Thirty of the dead birds were found near a single wind turbine that was reported to have had internal lighting left on overnight. This incident stands in stark contrast to industry assertions that just two birds per year are killed on average by each turbine. Data from Altamont Pass, California wind farms - the most studied in the nation - suggest that more than 2,000 golden eagles alone have been killed there.

'The good news is that it shouldn't be hard to make changes that will keep these sorts of unnecessary deaths from happening again, but it's disturbing that they happened at all. It has long been known that many birds navigate by the stars at night, that they normally fly lower during bad weather conditions, and that artificial light can draw them off course and lead to fatal collision events.

Banning night-time operations seems to workA fourth wind farm in West Virginia, the Beech Ridge Wind Energy Project in Greenbrier County, has not experienced large mortality events, probably because it is banned from operating during nighttime between April 1 and November 15.

‘Some West Virginia conservation groups have suggested that other wind farms in the state should shut down their wind turbines at certain times and seasons to protect birds. Given the recurring bird-kill problems, that idea needs to be seriously considered, at least during migration season on nights where low visibility is predicted. A wind farm in Texas is doing just that, so it is possible,' said Fuller.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Mysterious bird deaths hit Sweden

Dozens of dead birds have been found lying in a residential street in Sweden, days after thousands of birds fell to their deaths in the US.


Police in the town of Falkoeping have told Swedish media that between 50 and 100 jackdaws had died.

Some are said to have been hit by cars but others have no visible injuries.

Parallels have been drawn with the mysterious death of about 3,000 red-winged blackbirds in the US state of Arkansas on New Year's Eve.

Veterinary officials told Swedish radio that the case in Falkoeping was rare although they said there could be a number of reasons such as "disease or poisoning".

Aftonbladet newspaper quoted one resident, Drilon Hulaj, who said that as he drove home late on Tuesday night the street in front of him was dotted with "hundreds of dead birds".


Mr Hulaj said he had been immediately reminded of the events in the town of Beebe, Arkansas. Scientists have said the blackbirds there may have been affected by fireworks.

There have been no reports of fireworks or storms in Falkoeping at the time

http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=4348728589329576621

Mysterious bird deaths hit Sweden

Dozens of dead birds have been found lying in a residential street in Sweden, days after thousands of birds fell to their deaths in the US.


Police in the town of Falkoeping have told Swedish media that between 50 and 100 jackdaws had died.

Some are said to have been hit by cars but others have no visible injuries.

Parallels have been drawn with the mysterious death of about 3,000 red-winged blackbirds in the US state of Arkansas on New Year's Eve.

Veterinary officials told Swedish radio that the case in Falkoeping was rare although they said there could be a number of reasons such as "disease or poisoning".

Aftonbladet newspaper quoted one resident, Drilon Hulaj, who said that as he drove home late on Tuesday night the street in front of him was dotted with "hundreds of dead birds".


Mr Hulaj said he had been immediately reminded of the events in the town of Beebe, Arkansas. Scientists have said the blackbirds there may have been affected by fireworks.

There have been no reports of fireworks or storms in Falkoeping at the time

http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=4348728589329576621

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

First Arkansas, now dead birds fall out of the sky in Louisiana

Just a few days after 5,000 blackbirds fell dead from the sky over Arkansas it has happened again, this time in Louisiana.

About 500 red-winged blackbirds dropped dead on to a stretch of road in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.


Scientists are trying to establish if the event is linked to the one 480km (300 miles) to the north in Beebe, Arkansas.

Last week, about 83,000 dead and dying drum fish washed up along a 20-mile stretch of the Arkansas River, west of Beebe.

Carcasses from both events are being sent to experts for tests. One theory is that the birds were spooked by New Year fireworks.

This is not the first mystery involving dead birds, in March of this year hundreds of dead starlings crash landed on a a street in Somerset.

A nearby resident said: ‘It was like something out of a horror film – like Hitchcock’s The Birds.'


Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/news/851819-first-arkansas-now-dead-birds-fall-out-of-the-sky-in-louisiana#ixzz1AANZlLpQ

First Arkansas, now dead birds fall out of the sky in Louisiana

Just a few days after 5,000 blackbirds fell dead from the sky over Arkansas it has happened again, this time in Louisiana.

About 500 red-winged blackbirds dropped dead on to a stretch of road in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.


Scientists are trying to establish if the event is linked to the one 480km (300 miles) to the north in Beebe, Arkansas.

Last week, about 83,000 dead and dying drum fish washed up along a 20-mile stretch of the Arkansas River, west of Beebe.

Carcasses from both events are being sent to experts for tests. One theory is that the birds were spooked by New Year fireworks.

This is not the first mystery involving dead birds, in March of this year hundreds of dead starlings crash landed on a a street in Somerset.

A nearby resident said: ‘It was like something out of a horror film – like Hitchcock’s The Birds.'


Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/news/851819-first-arkansas-now-dead-birds-fall-out-of-the-sky-in-louisiana#ixzz1AANZlLpQ