Bird Control at Airports
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Environmental Conservation
- Vol. 10 (2) , 115-124
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0376892900012200
Abstract
Birds are a serious threat to aircraft, particularly near airports. For civil aircraft about 75% of all bird-strikes occur near airports. Gulls and small flocking-birds provide the greatest threat to aircraft near airports. Birds are attracted to airports because they become habituated to the noise and traffic, and are attracted by the presence of areas for roosting, loafing, and feeding. Serious bird-strikes can be reduced around airports by reducing the number of birds, by making the birds get out of the way of airplanes, by having planes avoid birds, by adding physical protection to the airplanes, and by switching to new types of aircraft which are safer with respect to bird-strikes. The first two solutions involve bird control, while the last three involve modification of aircraft or aircraft routes. Airport personnel are usually involved only in controlling bird numbers or in dispersing them from the airport.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Birds and aircraftBiological Conservation, 1973
- A review of gull damage and management methods at nature reservesBiological Conservation, 1972
- Orange runway lighting as a method for reducing bird strike damage to aircraftCSIRO Wildlife Research, 1969
- Quantitative and qualitative changes in habitat and avifauna at Sydney airportCSIRO Wildlife Research, 1969
- Diurnal movement patterns of the Silver Gull, Larus novaehollandiae Stephens, at Sydney airportCSIRO Wildlife Research, 1969
- Prospective Considerations Concerning Bio-Acoustics in Relation to Bird-scaring TechniquesPublished by Elsevier ,1968
- Modification of the Habitat as a Means of Bird ControlPublished by Elsevier ,1968
- Recent Developments in Bird Scaring on AirfieldsPublished by Elsevier ,1968
- Airplane-Albatross Collisions on Midway AtollOrnithological Applications, 1966
- Acoustic Irritation Threshold of Ringbilled GullsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1957