10 ways to prevent plane bird strikes
Hardly
a week goes by without a plane somewhere in the US making an emergency
landing after hitting birds. As these incidents reach record levels,
airports are coming up with increasingly imaginative ways of combating
them.
A Southwest Airlines plane recently made an emergency return
to Tennessee's Nashville International Airport after hitting birds at
take-off.
There was a similar incident at Chicago's O'Hare Airport a
few weeks ago and another involving an Alaska Airlines flight that made
an emergency landing in Oakland while en route to Honolulu.
According to a report by the Federal Aviation Administration,
the number of bird strikes has increased nearly six-fold since 1990 to a
record 10,343 in 2012.
This is blamed on four factors. There are larger populations of
some of the birds responsible - for instance, there are twice as many
Canada geese in North America now as there were in 1990. And many birds
find airports to be attractive habitats.
'There was a boom'
"It sounded like a golf ball hitting the windshield. You have the surprise of the impact, it gives you a fright and yes, there's a rush of adrenalin but you have to make decisions to overcome that. We always tell the students to aviate, navigate and communicate. That means fly the plane, figure out where you have to go and tell the tower what you need to do."
There are also more flights,
quieter engines and greater awareness which has meant more rigorous
reporting. After a US Airways plane was downed by geese and had to land
in the Hudson in New York in 2009 - making pilot Chesley Sullenberger an
overnight international hero - reports of bird strikes spiked.
But in recent years, bird-strike damage to aircraft in the
vicinity of airports has fallen, because of success in dispersing the
birds, and improving aircraft design. Here's a selection of methods
already used or in the pipeline.
1. Every airport in the US, and many more
across the world, use pyrotechnics daily to drive the birds away, says
Michael Begier, national co-ordinator of the airport wildlife hazards
programme at the US Department of Agriculture. "The flash, bang kind of
stuff immediately gets their attention and pushes them away." Bangers
and screamers make a loud explosion, others make a whistling sound,
while some emit sparks - different birds respond to different things and
some even take flight at the mere sight of the wildlife vehicle. A
banger shot from a pistol cartridge can travel 30-40 yards before
exploding, while a 12-gauge shotgun can reach 70-100 yards. Waterfowl
respond fairly well and after two or three times they relocate. Raptors
can be harder to move.
Airport biologist Odin Stephens deploys pyrotechnics at a military airbase
2. A population of Canada geese used to live
between the two runways at Salt Lake City. Not any more, says Gib
Rokich, who oversees the airport's wildlife programme, due to a system
of egg addling. "The goose is scared from the nest and the eggs are
addled or oiled pretty much in place by picking each egg up individually
and shaking them or submerging them in vegetable oil. The goose
continues to sit on them but they never have a successful hatch. If she
lays 10 goslings, and five survive into adulthood, then they will want
to come back to the same location to nest, so you can see how it can
multiply. After four years, we broke the cycle, so we still get the
occasional one but they're not established any more."
3. Bird distress signals are a pretty
effective way of dispersing species that cause these problems, says
David Randell, director of Scarecrow, which provides systems to 20-30
British airports. Speakers mounted on a car emit the sounds of up to 20
different species, operated by a driver using a tablet-style device.
Sky's job description - chase birds
4. Aborder collie called Sky
has been chasing birds for five years at Fort Myers, Florida. Since
1999, when dogs were first used, there has been a 17% drop in bird
strikes. While the egrets, herons and moorhens can get used to
pyrotechnics, they never adapt to the presence of a natural predator
like Sky, says Ellen Lindblad, director of planning and environmental
compliance at Southwest Florida International Airport. "She seems to
love it, day after day. This is what border collies are bred for."
5. Pigs have been
used to disrupt the habitat of the 10-15 California gulls that used to
routinely fly over Salt Lake City airport twice a day. Wildlife services
had tried harassing them without success, then someone came up with the
idea of putting pigs on their island habitat, adjacent to the airport.
The pigs trampled and ate the gulls' eggs and are now used for a few
weeks every spring as a deterrent. The migrating gulls arrive, see the
pigs waiting to eat their eggs, and then go to another location.
6. Eliminating vegetation removes
a food source for birds and deters them from settling. At Salt Lake
City, 70 acres of grassland was replaced this summer with ground-up
asphalt. Grasshoppers, gnats and armyworms attract rodents which in turn
attract raptors. An airport in Sandusky, Ohio, has experimented with
different types of grass, to identify which mix is least attractive to
Canada geese.
7. About 300-500 raptors are trapped and
relocated each year at Salt Lake City, including red-tail hawks, barn
owls and peregrine falcons. Some traps use a rodent to entice the bird
and catch their feet in a noose. Others are self-operating, built on top
of pigeon coops to attract larger birds - they swoop in, and a door
slams shut behind them.
Plane v reptile
- About 6% of all reported collisions with wildlife cause a precautionary landing or aborted take-off
- Birds were involved in 97%, terrestrial mammals in 2.2% and the rest by bats and reptiles
- 70% of bird strikes with civil aircraft occurred below 500 feet (152 m)
- Globally, wildlife strikes have killed more than 250 people and destroyed more than 229 aircraft since 1988
8. Achicken gun
is used to test the durability of aircraft windscreens and engines. A
thawed chicken is fired out of the gun using compressed air, in an
effort to simulate the impact of a bird hitting the plane in flight.
9. Lights on aircraft
could be used to increase their visibility to birds, says Begier. The
idea is to manipulate the characteristics of the light by varying the
pulse rates and wavelengths in the electromagnetic spectrum and tune
these changes to specific bird species. The lights would provide an
earlier warning so the birds can detect and avoid the aircraft. Some of
these changes to the light might be imperceptible to humans. Evidence
collected from dead birds in airports suggests they were trying to evade
the planes when they were hit. "We realised that the birds are trying
to make the right decision but don't have enough time so what we are
trying to do with the light research is give them that time."
10.The Dutch air force is
using a bird detecting radar that could eventually be adopted by civil
aircraft. "We've known since WWII that radar can see birds, when they
were coming across the Channel and they figured it was birds and not
German bombers," says Begier. These bird detecting radars are small and
mobile, and technology has come on in the last 10 years, but they can't
yet identify the species or numbers. "The ability to delay a commercial
flight with technology that's not quite there is the problem."