Abstract

Environmental impacts of wind energy facilities increasingly cause concern, a central issue being bats and birds killed by rotor blades. Two approaches have been employed to assess collision rates: carcass searches and surveys of animals prone to collisions. Carcass searches can provide an estimate for the actual number of animals being killed but they offer little information on the relation between collision rates and, for example, weather parameters due to the time of death not being precisely known. In contrast, a density index of animals exposed to collision is sufficient to analyse the parameters influencing the collision rate. However, quantification of the collision rate from animal density indices (e.g. acoustic bat activity or bird migration traffic rates) remains difficult. We combine carcass search data with animal density indices in a mixture model to investigate collision rates. In a simulation study we show that the collision rates estimated by our model were at least as precise as conventional estimates based solely on carcass search data. Furthermore, if certain conditions are met, the model can be used to predict the collision rate from density indices alone, without data from carcass searches. This can reduce the time and effort required to estimate collision rates. We applied the model to bat carcass search data obtained at 30 wind turbines in 15 wind facilities in Germany. We used acoustic bat activity and wind speed as predictors for the collision rate. The model estimates correlated well with conventional estimators. Our model can be used to predict the average collision rate. It enables an analysis of the effect of parameters such as rotor diameter or turbine type on the collision rate. The model can also be used in turbine-specific curtailment algorithms that predict the collision rate and reduce this rate with a minimal loss of energy production.

Highlights

  • Wind energy production is growing rapidly in many countries

  • The precision of the ‘‘corrected count’’ method had the highest value possible because we assumed that the true detection probability was known

  • We have shown how information about carcass detection probability can be integrated in a model that relates animal density measurements to the number of carcasses found to get an unbiased mortality estimate and to predict the collision rate

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Summary

Introduction

Wind energy production is growing rapidly in many countries. It is widely accepted as a renewable source of energy that does not entail the ecological problems inevitably associated with other sources of energy, fossil fuels and nuclear energy. In Germany, the number of wind energy turbines has increased from 1,200 in 1992 to 23,030 in 2012 [1]. There is concern that the growing production of wind energy is accompanied by new conservation issues, in particular the mortality of birds and bats through direct impact with rotor blades Mortality should be quantified and studied in relation to landscape and meteorological parameters or technical parameters of wind turbines in order to predict and reduce the collision rate

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