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Animals on runways can cause serious problems at small airports
May 05, 2009
It's a bird. It's a plane. It's a potentially deadly combination. A Purdue University study of 10 small Indiana airports found that animals can gain easy access to runways and infield areas, increasing the likelihood of planes striking those animals.
Animal strikes received national attention in January. Commercial pilot and Purdue alumnus Charles "Sully" Sullenberger was forced to land in the Hudson River after his plane hit a flock of Canada geese.
The study by Gene Rhodes, a professor of forestry and natural resources, documented that animals found ways through damaged fences or unfenced areas onto airport properties. Spotting deer, coyote and other animals in dangerous places was common.
"Just about every pilot we talked to at these airports said that during a landing they've had to pull up to avoid hitting an animal on the runway," Rhodes said. "With the size of planes using these airports, hitting a rabbit could flip a plane."
Rhodes' research was published in the fall issue of the journal Human-Wildlife Conflicts.
While Rhodes' study looked only at Indiana airports, he said there are thousands of airports all over the country that don't have the budgets to adequately fence their properties, endangering countless flights each year.
In the study, only four of the Indiana airports had fences around the entire perimeter, and even those had maintenance problems - such as holes dug under fences, access through culverts and holes in fences - that allowed animals onto the properties.
Despite the desire to keep animals away, Rhodes said airports often are a magnet for wildlife. Airports are required to own property around runways that is often rented to farmers. While that increases airports' meager budgets, those crops can attract animals looking for food.
"What you have planted affects what type of animals will be there," Rhodes said. "Even if you have certain grasses, you have small mammals that eat those, and those attract red-tailed hawks. A red-tailed hawk can bring down a small plane as fast as anything."
Previous studies cited in Rhodes' paper have shown that wildlife strikes cost more than a half a billion dollars each year and have been responsible for more than 350 human deaths in the last century. Travis DeVault, who co-authored the paper as Rhodes' postdoctoral researcher and is now a field station and project leader with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Services, said wildlife strikes have become more common in recent years.
"Many of the most hazardous species are increasing in population size. For example, about two-thirds of the largest bird species have shown population increases during the past 30 years," DeVault said. "Also, air traffic continues to increase. More birds in combination with more flights leads to more bird strikes."
DeVault added that new technology means planes are quieter today, giving birds less time to detect and avoid being struck.
Rhodes' study suggests enclosing 100 percent of airport perimeters with partially buried fencing, which keeps animals from tunneling underneath. Frequent maintenance also is key because many of the animals observed during the study entered the airports through damaged fences.
"If airports can use this study to show their needs, it can allow them to go after federal grants they need to make improvements," Rhodes said.
The Joint Transportation Research Program of the Indiana Department of Transportation and the Aviation Association of Indiana funded the research. Rhodes said the next step is to determine viable economic uses that also will deter wildlife from the land around airports.
Purdue University
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Wildlife (Earth Strikes Back)
by Pamela Grant (Author), Arthur Haswell (Author)
The many issues focused on in 'Wildlife' include species extinction and disuption of food chains, as well as why diversity of wildlife is important to humans.
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When Animals Strike
When Animals Strike tells the terrifying and fascinating stories of what happens when a wild animal attacks a human being. Relive, in blow-by-blow detail, more than a half dozen real life confrontations between man and beast: A mother grizzly takes down a man and his daughter as they hike through Glacier National Park. A juvenile gator ambushes a boy, while he swims in a small pond in Florida. A startled black bear chases a Colorado man and follows him 20 feet up a tree. A swarm of Africanized bees descend on an Arizona firefighter as he triesto rescue a stranded climber. A hungry coyote pounces on a little boy while he plays in a neighbor's yard in New Jersey. A rabid mountain lion stalks an Arizona boy celebrating his 10th birthday. Survivors and witnesses recount their...
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Rapid Strike American Bald Eagle Wildlife Collectible Figurine
by The Bradford Exchange
Exclusive American Bald Eagle Collectible Figurine is a Wildlife Sculpture that Comes to Life in a Limited-edition Home Decor - A quartet of bald eagles waits to spot their prey in the rushing rapids of the river below. Suddenly they plummet from the sky, the quickest snatching a fish in its claws and while the latecomers scrap over the leftovers. Pay tribute to one of nature's fiercest contests for survival with an action-packed three-dimensional wildlife sculpture featuring four American bald eagles in a scene of sharp talons and cold fury.Available exclusively from The Bradford Exchange, this dramatic collectible eagle figurine is handcrafted of artist's resin and hand-painted for magnificent realism and detail. No two are exactly alike! You'll thrill to this close-up look of the...
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Feeding Habits of Bass - When and Why They Strike - Glen Lau's
Also With: Homer Circle (Primary Contributor), Al Lindner (Primary Contributor), Rick CLunn (Primary Contributor)
Your host Homer Circle, with Al Lindner & RIck Clunn explain when & why bass strike or feed and give tips that will make you a better fisheman. Shows actual feeding & striking sequences.
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The surprise environmental strike: Arkansas Wildlife Federation uses costly citizens' lawsuits to get industry's attention. (includes related article): An article from: Arkansas Business
by Carol Griffee (Author)
This digital document is an article from Arkansas Business, published by Journal Publishing, Inc. on November 25, 1991. The length of the article is 2333 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: The surprise environmental strike: Arkansas Wildlife Federation uses costly citizens' lawsuits to get industry's attention. (includes related article) Author: Carol Griffee Publication: Arkansas Business (Magazine/Journal) Date: November 25, 1991 Publisher: Journal Publishing, Inc. Volume: v8 Issue: n48 Page: p16(2)
Distributed by Thomson...
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Wildlife strikes to civil aircraft in the United States, 1990-1999 (National Wildlife Strike Database serial report)
by Edward C Cleary (Author)
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Wildlife strikes to civil aircraft in the United States, 1990-2000 (Wildlife aircraft strike database)
by Edward C Cleary (Author)
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Wildlife: How We Use and Abuse Our Planet (Earth Strikes Back)
by Arthur Haswell (Author)
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Capitol Reef National Park DVD Postcard
Also With: Finley-Holiday Films (Producer)
This Capitol Reef DVD Postcard features 20 minutes of beautiful cinematography edited to inspiring music. Experience the incredible mountain scenery, wildlife, moods and geology of Capitol Reef National Park.
On-screen interpretive text identifies "placenames" and captures the essence of a visit to Capitol Reef - just like a postcard. Very enjoyable and entertaining.
The DVD Postcard features a DVD in a postcard-shaped mailer where you can write a "Wish you were here." message and mail it as a gift. A great gift to share your visit to Capitol Reef with family and friends or as the perfect remembrance.
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Disease strikes again at Salton Sea.: An article from: Endangered Species Update
by Steve Johnson (Author)
This digital document is an article from Endangered Species Update, published by University of Michigan, School of Natural Resources on November 1, 2001. The length of the article is 986 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: Disease strikes again at Salton Sea. Author: Steve Johnson Publication: Endangered Species Update (Newsletter) Date: November 1, 2001 Publisher: University of Michigan, School of Natural Resources Volume: 18 Issue: 6 Page: S6(2)
Distributed by Thomson...
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