When can local bird detection radars best complement broad‐scale early‐warning forecasts of risk potential for bird–aircraft strikes as part of an integrated approach to strike mitigation?

Author:

Colón Melanie R.1ORCID,Long Ashley M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Louisiana State Univ. Agricultural Center, School of Renewable Natural Resources Baton Rouge LA USA

Abstract

Worldwide, wildlife–aircraft strikes cost more than US$1.2 billion in aircraft damage and downtime and jeopardize the safety of aircrews, passengers, and animals. Radar has long been used to monitor flying animal movements and can be a useful tool for strike mitigation. In the USA, the Avian Hazard Advisory System (AHAS) is an early‐warning system that integrates data from next‐generation weather radar (NEXRAD) weather surveillance radars (WSRs) with historic bird occurrence data to quantify avian activity and forecast the relative bird risk within a ~9.3‐km radius of military and civilian airfields. Bird detection radars (BDRs) with both horizontal‐surveillance and vertical‐scanning components are also available for monitoring local avian activity at airports, but we have little information regarding the congruence of broad‐scale warnings and local avian activity where WSRs and BDRs overlap. We quantified trends in biological activity recorded at hourly intervals by a BDR at an airfield in Texas, USA, and in the most frequently assigned AHAS risk forecasts for that site during the same intervals. We then examined the strength of association between these datasets by season and time of day to determine when information from BDRs might best complement forecasts from the broad‐scale AHAS system. We found a strong overall association between the datasets but weak or moderate agreement during daylight periods, when most strikes occur. NEXRAD WSRs see only limited bird activity near the Earth's surface, where the majority of damaging strikes take place and, not surprisingly, AHAS warnings during our study were best predicted by the BDR at higher altitudes. Our results suggest BDRs might best complement early‐warning systems, like AHAS, as part of integrated strike mitigation plans at airfields with large numbers of hazardous birds flying at low altitudes during daylight hours, especially in late afternoon.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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