AI Article Synopsis

  • Conservation practitioners need to manage nuisance species, like turkey vultures, which can be hazardous to aircraft.
  • This study evaluated the effectiveness of different types of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) in dispersing vultures by examining their responses to various UAS platforms and approaches.
  • Results showed that vultures reacted more quickly to fixed-wing UAS and perceived targeted approaches as riskier, but overall effectiveness varied, suggesting that the choice of UAS should depend on specific management goals related to dispersal.

Article Abstract

A challenge that conservation practitioners face is manipulating behavior of nuisance species. The turkey vulture (Cathartes aura) can cause substantial damage to aircraft if struck. The goal of this study was to assess vulture responses to unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) for use as a possible dispersal tool. Our treatments included three platforms (fixed-wing, multirotor, and a predator-like ornithopter [powered by flapping flight]) and two approach types (30 m overhead or targeted towards a vulture) in an operational context. We evaluated perceived risk as probability of reaction, reaction time, flight-initiation distance (FID), vulture remaining index, and latency to return. Vultures escaped sooner in response to the fixed-wing; however, fewer remained after multirotor treatments. Targeted approaches were perceived as riskier than overhead. Vulture perceived risk was enhanced by flying the multirotor in a targeted approach. We found no effect of our treatments on FID or latency to return. Latency was negatively correlated with UAS speed, perhaps because slower UAS spent more time over the area. Greatest visual saliency followed as: ornithopter, fixed-wing, and multirotor. Despite its appearance, the ornithopter was not effective at dispersing vultures. Because effectiveness varied, multirotor/fixed-wing UAS use should be informed by management goals (immediate dispersal versus latency).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8569017PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-01098-5DOI Listing

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