Minimal effects of wind turbines on the distribution of wintering farmland birds

被引:47
作者
Devereux, Claire L. [1 ]
Denny, Matthew J. H. [2 ]
Whittingham, Mark J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Newcastle Univ, Sch Biol, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU, Tyne & Wear, England
[2] Baker Shepherd Gillespie, Oxford OX29 4SX, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
climate change; disturbance; sustainable agriculture; farmland biodiversity; agri-environment schemes; noise pollution; wind energy;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2664.2008.01560.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
1. Energy production from wind power is increasing rapidly in Europe to help combat the threats from global warming. For example, the European Commission have set a target for 20% of EU energy to come from renewable sources by 2020. In recent decades, biodiversity on European farmland has fallen dramatically due to agricultural intensification. Agri-environment schemes (AES) have been implemented across the EU, in part at least, to combat these declines. Significant numbers of turbines are, and will be, built on farmland. There is, therefore, a potential conflict between wind turbines and AES on farmland. 2. Various mechanisms potentially cause wind turbines to alter bird distribution including noise and physical structure. 3. We show that turbine location (controlling for other effects such as boundary location and crop type) did not affect the distribution of four functional groups of wintering farmland birds (seed-eaters, corvids, gamebirds and Eurasian skylarks) at differing distances from wind turbines ranging from 0-150 m to 600-750 m. The only species for which distribution was related to the presence of wind turbines was the largest and least manoeuvrable (common pheasant Phasianus colchicus L.). 4. In a further analysis of data collected at 0-75 m and 75-150 m from turbines, we found no evidence to suggest that farmland birds in our study avoided areas close to wind turbines. 5. Synthesis and applications. This is the first evidence suggesting that the present and future location of large numbers of wind turbines on European farmland is unlikely to have detrimental effects on farmland birds (at least for those species included in our study). This should be welcome news for nature conservationists, wind energy companies and policy-makers. However, our work is only a first step, as there may be potential influences of wind turbines on bird distribution during the breeding season.
引用
收藏
页码:1689 / 1694
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Context-dependent effects of wind turbines on bats in rural landscapes
    Sotillo, Alejandro
    le Viol, Isabelle
    Bas, Yves
    Kerbiriou, Christian
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2024, 295
  • [32] Gearbox and Drivetrain Models to Study Dynamic Effects of Modern Wind Turbines
    Girsang, Irving P.
    Dhupia, Jaspreet S.
    Muljadi, Eduard
    Singh, Mohit
    Pao, Lucy Y.
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRY APPLICATIONS, 2014, 50 (06) : 3777 - 3786
  • [33] Landscape composition influences farm management effects on farmland birds in winter: A pan-European approach
    Geiger, Flavia
    de Snoo, Geert R.
    Berendse, Frank
    Guerrero, Irene
    Morales, Manuel B.
    Onate, Juan J.
    Eggers, Sonke
    Part, Tomas
    Bommarco, Riccardo
    Bengtsson, Jan
    Clement, Lars W.
    Weisser, Wolfgang W.
    Olszewski, Adam
    Ceryngier, Piotr
    Hawro, Violetta
    Inchausti, Pablo
    Fischer, Christina
    Flohre, Andreas
    Thies, Carsten
    Tscharntke, Teja
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2010, 139 (04) : 571 - 577
  • [34] Effects of non-cropped landscape diversity on spatial dynamics of farmland birds in intensive farming systems
    Chiron, Francois
    Filippi-Codaccioni, Ondine
    Jiguet, Frederic
    Devictor, Vincent
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2010, 143 (11) : 2609 - 2616
  • [35] Effects of aerodynamic damping on the tower load of offshore horizontal axis wind turbines
    Liu, Xiong
    Lu, Cheng
    Li, Gangqiang
    Godbole, Ajit
    Chen, Yan
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2017, 204 : 1101 - 1114
  • [36] Woody semi-natural habitats modulate the effects of field size and functional crop diversity on farmland birds
    Frank, Claudia
    Hertzog, Lionel
    Klimek, Sebastian
    Schwieder, Marcel
    Tetteh, Gideon Okpoti
    Boehner, Hannah G. S.
    Roeder, Norbert
    Levers, Christian
    Katzenberger, Jakob
    Kreft, Holger
    Kamp, Johannes
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2024, 61 (05) : 987 - 999
  • [37] Modelling risks posed by wind turbines and power lines to soaring birds: the black stork (Ciconia nigra) in Italy as a case study
    Smeraldo, Sonia
    Bosso, Luciano
    Fraissinet, Maurizio
    Bordignon, Lucio
    Brunelli, Massimo
    Ancillotto, Leonardo
    Russo, Danilo
    BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2020, 29 (06) : 1959 - 1976
  • [38] Interpreting failure to reject the null hypothesis of displacement from wind turbines in three species of grassland birds: Response to Johnson (2016)
    Hale, Amanda M.
    CONDOR, 2016, 118 (03): : 676 - 679
  • [39] Characterization and optimal site matching of wind turbines: Effects on the economics of synthetic methane production
    de la Cruz, Veronica
    Martin, Mariano
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2016, 133 : 1302 - 1311
  • [40] Protection of interconnected wind turbines against lightning effects: Overvoltages and electromagnetic transients study
    Rodrigues, R. B.
    Mendes, V. M. F.
    Catalao, J. P. S.
    RENEWABLE ENERGY, 2012, 46 : 232 - 240