3 results match your criteria: "Renewable Energy Wildlife Institute[Affiliation]"
Conserv Biol
April 2024
Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Boise, Idaho, USA.
Bird populations are declining globally. Wind and solar energy can reduce emissions of fossil fuels that drive anthropogenic climate change, yet renewable-energy production represents a potential threat to bird species. Surveys to assess potential effects at renewable-energy facilities are exclusively local, and the geographic extent encompassed by birds killed at these facilities is largely unknown, which creates challenges for minimizing and mitigating the population-level and cumulative effects of these fatalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
May 2023
Renewable Energy Wildlife Institute, Washington, DC, United States of America.
Information on when birds and bats die from collisions with wind turbines can help refine efforts to minimize fatalities via curtailment of energy productions and can offer insight into the risk factors associated with collision fatalities. Using data pooled from 114 post-construction monitoring studies conducted at wind facilities across the United States, we described seasonal patterns of fatalities among birds and bats. Bat fatalities peaked in the fall.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFR Soc Open Sci
March 2022
U.S. Geological Survey, Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, Boise, ID 87648, USA.
Renewable energy production can kill individual birds, but little is known about how it affects avian populations. We assessed the vulnerability of populations for 23 priority bird species killed at wind and solar facilities in California, USA. Bayesian hierarchical models suggested that 48% of these species were vulnerable to population-level effects from added fatalities caused by renewables and other sources.
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