CALGARY — New research is blaming tall wind turbines for the deaths of hundreds of migratory bats in the foothills of southwestern Alberta’s Rocky Mountains.
Robert Barclay, a University of Calgary biology professor and international bat expert, began a study in 2006 after large numbers of the flying mammals were found dead on wind farms near Pincher Creek.
More and more giant windmills tower over the landscape in southern Alberta and across the country as Canadians look for greener sources of electricity. But the swooping wind-catching blades are proving fatal to bats.
The study says roughly 90 per cent of the animals that were found dead had severe respiratory injuries consistent with a sudden drop in air pressure that occurs when they get close to turbine blades.
“A large number of the bat carcasses we found had no (visible) injuries. It didn’t look like anything had happened to them," said project leader Erin Baerwald.
“They were lying on the ground — no broken wings or injuries you would expect to see if they were struck by these large blades."
The blades are 40 metres long and their tips can move at a speed of 250 kilometres an hour.
“We started looking inside and what we found was a large proportion of these bats internally had severe hemorrhaging, so they were full of blood."
A veterinary pathologist found blood vessels in the bats had burst and the lungs were filling with blood.
“What happens when you fly through an area when the pressure drops dramatically . . . is the lungs overexpand and it causes breakages in all the small vessels around the lungs," explained Baerwald.
The results of the study were to be published in the Aug. 26 online edition of Current Biology.
There are nine species of bats found in Alberta, three of which migrate through the province each year. The majority of bats killed by wind turbines are migratory and roost in trees. They include hoary bats, eastern red bats and silver-haired bats and have been known to migrate from as far away as Mexico and the southern United States.
Bats typically reach ages of 30 or more and produce only one or two offspring at a time, so researchers fear the deaths could have far-reaching consequences.
“Slow reproductive rates can limit a population’s ability to recover from crashes and thereby increase the risk of endangerment or extinction," said Barclay in a news release.
He said all three species of migratory bats eat thousands of insects, including crop pests, and large-scale losses of the nocturnal animals could have an impact on ecosystems along their routes. Prior to 2005 there were few bat deaths near the turbines, but the older units were about 20 metres lower than the towers now being erected.
Baerwald said there is no obvious way to reduce the pressure drop at wind turbines without severely limiting their use. But since bats are more active when wind speeds are low, one strategy she suggested might be to increase the rate at which turbine blades rotate during the fall migration.
1 comment:
Those pressure fluctuations move/expand outward in the form of low frequency infrasonic sound creating problems for all air breathing creatures.These also create material/cavity resonances in the environment in which they live in or within themselves which can amplify the overall effect.
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