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Impact of power lines on bird mortality in a subalpine area

Type of publication

Peer reviewed

Author

Bevanger & Brøseth

Year

2004

Language

English

Publicly available

Yes

Organisation

Norwegian Institure for Nature Research

Organisation type

Research centre

Country of experiment

Norway

Description

Four sections of power lines, amounting to 4,000 km, in a subalpine area of southern Norway were patrolled from April 1989 to June 1995 to record birds killed when colliding with the overhead wires. A total of 399 dead birds and bird remains were identified as collision victims. At least 24 species were identified among the victims, the majority only represented by a few individuals. Ptarmigan (Lagopus spp.), particularly Willow ptarmigan (Lagopus lagopus), made up 80% of the victims. Season, power line section and ptarmigan abundance affected the collision rate of this species. The highest rate was found in winter, marginally higher than in spring. Few collided with the power lines in autumn, and none were identified as victims in summer. On average, the annual minimum ptarmigan collision rate was found to be 5.3 birds km per 1 power line. The only parameter with a predictable effect on the probability of ptarmigan collisions was the height of the trees, as collision spots tended to be in places with low trees. Mortality due to power lines was, on average, at least 2.4 times higher than the annual ptarmigan hunting bag in the area during this 6–year study.

Species researched

Ptarmigan

Key words
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