Predicting the impacts of wind farms on seabirds: An individual-based model
Authored by Victoria Warwick-Evans, Phil W Atkinson, Ian Walkington, Jonathan A Green
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.12996
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://besjournals-onlinelibrary-wiley-com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/action/downloadSupplement?doi=10.1111%2F1365-2664.12996&file=jpe12996-sup-0001-AppendixS1.docx
Abstract
1. Individual-based models (IBMs) are a powerful tool in predicting the
consequences of environmental change on animal populations and
supporting evidence-based decision making for conservation planning.
2. There are increasing proposals for wind farms in UK waters and
seabirds are a vulnerable group, which may be at risk from these
developments.
3. We developed a spatially explicit IBM to investigate the potential
impacts of the installation of wind farms in the English Channel and
North Sea on body mass, productivity and mortality of a breeding
population of Northern gannets for which we have tracking data.
4. A baseline model with no wind farms accurately represented the status
of a sample of tracked gannets at the end of the 90-day chick-rearing
period, and the behaviour-time budget was similar to that of tracked
gannets.
5. Model simulations in the presence of wind farms indicated that
installations should have little impact on the gannet population, when
either avoidance behaviour or collision risk scenarios were simulated.
Furthermore, wind farms would need to be ten times larger or in more
highly used areas in order to have population-level impacts on
Alderney's gannets.
6. Synthesis and applications. Our spatially explicit individual-based
models (IBM) highlight that it is vital to know the colony-specific
foraging grounds of seabirds that may be impacted, when identifying
potential wind farm sites, in order to account for cumulative impacts
from multiple sites. Avoiding areas highly used for foraging and
commuting, and avoiding large-scale developments should be effective in
limiting gannet mortality as a result of collision, competition and
energy expenditure. Our IBM provides a robust approach which can be
adapted for other seabird populations or to predict the impacts from
other types of spatial change in the marine environment.
Tags
Individual Based Models
vulnerability
renewable energy
Strategies
Populations
Tracking
Benefits
Sea
Seabirds
Collision risk
Wind farms
Habitat
loss
Evidence-based decision making
Morus bassanus
Northern gannets
Offshore development
Predictive
modelling
Gannets morus-bassanus