Sex and Age Bias in Australian Magpies Struck by Aircraft

Author:

Steele William K.1,Weston Michael A.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ecology Balance, P.O. Box 2513, Ringwood North, VIC 3134, Australia

2. Deakin Marine, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University Melbourne Campus, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, VIC 3125, Australia

Abstract

Wildlife–aircraft collisions represent a safety and financial challenge, necessitating site-specific hazard assessments, which are generally based on species’ attributes and collision frequencies. However, for many bird species, collision probability and risk may not be distributed equally among individuals, with sex and age differences possible but rarely examined. We examine Australian Magpies, a resident, grassland species of bird in southeastern Australia frequently involved in collisions with aircraft at airports, and which can be sexed (adults) and aged. We compared collision rates recorded at Melbourne Airport, Victoria, Australia, with airside counts of magpies, recording, when observable, the sex and age of the birds. Adult females and males were similarly abundant at the airport (46.6% female), but females were struck relatively more frequently than males (78.1% female). Juvenile (first-year) magpies were struck more frequently than expected based on their representation in bird counts. We show an example of where some demographic groups within species represent higher hazard potential to aircraft than others, and management which manipulates demography of magpies at and near the airport (such as discouraging local breeding and targeted harassment/dispersal) may be fruitful.

Funder

WKS

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Process Chemistry and Technology,Economic Geology,Fuel Technology

Reference45 articles.

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3. DeVault, T.L., Blackwell, B.F., and Belant, J.L. (2013). Wildlife in Airport Environments: Preventing Animal-Aircraft Collisions through Science-Based Management, John Hopkins University Press.

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