4.7 Article

Predicting bird-window collisions with weather radar

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 8, Pages 1593-1601

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13832

Keywords

anthropogenic threats; avian migration; building collisions; NEXRAD; urbanization; wildlife mortality; WSR‐ 88D

Funding

  1. Fritz Knopf Doctoral Fellowship
  2. Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment Station (OAES)
  3. Oklahoma State University Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management
  4. National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch Grant Funds through OAES [OKL-02915]
  5. Leon Levy Foundation
  6. Edward W. Rose Postdoctoral Fellowship
  7. NSF [1633206]
  8. Div Of Information & Intelligent Systems
  9. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [1633206] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study demonstrates that radar can be a valuable tool for predicting bird-window collisions and improving efforts to reduce collisions, such as decreasing nighttime lighting from and around buildings.
Up to 1 billion birds die annually in the U.S. from window collisions; most of these casualties represent migratory native species. Because this major mortality source likely contributes to the decline of the North American avifauna, mitigation tools are needed that accurately predict real-time collision risk, allowing hazards to be minimized before fatalities occur. We assessed the potential use of weather surveillance radar, an emerging tool increasingly used to study and to predict bird migration, as an early warning system to reduce numbers of bird-window collisions. Based on bird-window collision monitoring in Oklahoma, USA, we show that radar-derived migration variables are associated with nightly numbers of collisions. Across the entire night, numbers of collisions increased with higher migration traffic rate (i.e. numbers of birds crossing a fixed line perpendicular to migration direction), and migration variables for specific periods within the night were also related to nightly collisions. Synthesis and applications. Our study suggests that radar can be an invaluable tool to predict bird-window collisions and help refine mitigation efforts that reduce collisions such as reducing nighttime lighting emitted from and near buildings.

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