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Bat mortality at wind turbines in northwestern Europe

Rydell, Jens LU ; Bach, Lothar ; Dubourg-Savage, Marie-Jo ; Green, Martin LU ; Rodrigues, Luisa and Hedenström, Anders LU (2010) In Acta Chiropterologica 12(2). p.261-274
Abstract
We reviewed published and unpublished written reports on bat mortality at wind farms in northwestern Europe. The estimated number of bats killed per turbine annually was relatively low (0-3) on flat, open farmland away from the coast, higher (2-5) in more complex agricultural landscapes, and highest (5-20) at the coast and on forested hills and ridges. The species killed almost exclusively (98%) belonged to a group (Nyctalus, Pipistrellus, Vespertilio and Eptesicus spp.) adapted for open-air foraging. The bats were killed by the moving rotor blades as they hunted insects attracted to the turbines. This occurred independently of sex and age. Peak mortality varied considerably in frequency and timing among years, but the events usually (90%)... (More)
We reviewed published and unpublished written reports on bat mortality at wind farms in northwestern Europe. The estimated number of bats killed per turbine annually was relatively low (0-3) on flat, open farmland away from the coast, higher (2-5) in more complex agricultural landscapes, and highest (5-20) at the coast and on forested hills and ridges. The species killed almost exclusively (98%) belonged to a group (Nyctalus, Pipistrellus, Vespertilio and Eptesicus spp.) adapted for open-air foraging. The bats were killed by the moving rotor blades as they hunted insects attracted to the turbines. This occurred independently of sex and age. Peak mortality varied considerably in frequency and timing among years, but the events usually (90%) occurred on nights with low wind speeds in late July to early October and to a lesser extent (10%) also in April-June. The mortality increased with turbine tower height and rotor diameter but was independent of the distance from the ground to the lowest rotor point. It was also independent of the size of the wind park (1-18 turbines). Bat species other than the open-air suite referred to above are usually not at risk at wind turbines, because they fly below the rotors, but are still killed occasionally (2%). (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
wind farming, renewable energy, killing factors, high-altitude feeding, bat conservation, aeroecology, aerial ecology
in
Acta Chiropterologica
volume
12
issue
2
pages
261 - 274
publisher
Museum and Institute of Zoology, Polish Academy of Sciences
external identifiers
  • wos:000285772400001
  • scopus:78650195297
ISSN
1508-1109
DOI
10.3161/150811010X537846
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e6c2e38e-fc64-48e7-9238-8591c3993004 (old id 1811552)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:24:09
date last changed
2022-04-06 04:53:37
@article{e6c2e38e-fc64-48e7-9238-8591c3993004,
  abstract     = {{We reviewed published and unpublished written reports on bat mortality at wind farms in northwestern Europe. The estimated number of bats killed per turbine annually was relatively low (0-3) on flat, open farmland away from the coast, higher (2-5) in more complex agricultural landscapes, and highest (5-20) at the coast and on forested hills and ridges. The species killed almost exclusively (98%) belonged to a group (Nyctalus, Pipistrellus, Vespertilio and Eptesicus spp.) adapted for open-air foraging. The bats were killed by the moving rotor blades as they hunted insects attracted to the turbines. This occurred independently of sex and age. Peak mortality varied considerably in frequency and timing among years, but the events usually (90%) occurred on nights with low wind speeds in late July to early October and to a lesser extent (10%) also in April-June. The mortality increased with turbine tower height and rotor diameter but was independent of the distance from the ground to the lowest rotor point. It was also independent of the size of the wind park (1-18 turbines). Bat species other than the open-air suite referred to above are usually not at risk at wind turbines, because they fly below the rotors, but are still killed occasionally (2%).}},
  author       = {{Rydell, Jens and Bach, Lothar and Dubourg-Savage, Marie-Jo and Green, Martin and Rodrigues, Luisa and Hedenström, Anders}},
  issn         = {{1508-1109}},
  keywords     = {{wind farming; renewable energy; killing factors; high-altitude feeding; bat conservation; aeroecology; aerial ecology}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{261--274}},
  publisher    = {{Museum and Institute of Zoology, Polish Academy of Sciences}},
  series       = {{Acta Chiropterologica}},
  title        = {{Bat mortality at wind turbines in northwestern Europe}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3161/150811010X537846}},
  doi          = {{10.3161/150811010X537846}},
  volume       = {{12}},
  year         = {{2010}},
}