Friday, 9 April 2010

Wind farms threat to geese examined

Barnacle geese heading to the Arctic for the summer have been tagged with satellite trackers to find out more about their migration amid concern planned wind farms could get in their way.


The Svalbard barnacle goose, which overwinters in the Solway Firth, saw numbers plummet to just 300 by the 1940s but the population has recovered to some 30,000 today.

But now experts at the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT) are concerned planned offshore wind farms in the Firth of Forth and off the UK coast could prove an obstacle for the birds.

Dr Larry Griffin, WWT principal research officer, has tagged 25 geese in the past with GPS tags and tracked their spring migrations over four years.

He said the bird's main flight corridor takes them into sites earmarked for new turbines as part of the UK's planned massive expansion in offshore wind power.

Dr Griffin is concerned the geese arrive in the area in the hours of darkness and are flying through in low light or resting on the sea for a few hours.

So he has tagged five adult male geese this year at Caerlaverock Wetland Centre on the Solway Firth before they head off this month to the High Arctic Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard.

He is hoping to fill in gaps in his data to find out the altitude the birds are flying at and whether they are resting on the sea in the areas, using improved solar-powered GPS which could have enough battery to track them at night.

By tracking the birds online during their migration, he also hopes to see how they cope with existing wind farms they encounter on the Norwegian coast. And for those farms potentially being developed in Scottish territorial waters, where the sites are more fixed, Dr Griffin suggested mitigation measures might be put in place.

These could include the arrangement of the turbines in a different way to make them less of an obstacle, or putting lights on them to make them more obvious.

http://news.uk.msn.com/environment/articles.aspx?cp-documentid=152959492

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