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Environment & Energy
In reply to the discussion: Leading Bird Conservation Group Formally Petitions Feds to Regulate Wind Industry [View all]OKIsItJustMe
(21,875 posts)18. Power line pylon killed Berkley the adopted vulture, together with all the hopes of the environmenta
http://www.greenbalkans.org/show.php?language=en_EN&cat_id=35&id=1247&
[font face="Times, Serif"][font size="5"]Power line pylon killed Berkley the adopted vulture, together with all the hopes of the environmentalists[/font] 2011-10-19
An extremely tragic end ceased the three-year adventures of the bird imported from Spain and released on October 14th 2011 within the Second National Vulture Festival.
The bird was adopted by the Vanchev Family from Plovdiv, who granted funds for the fitting of an expensive GPS/GSM transmitter to help us follow the adaptation and behavior of Berkley into the wild.
The transmitter was the one that helped us reveal the tragic end of the bird several subsequent signals sent on 16-17-18 October 2011 showed that the location of the vulture did not change for hours. At the same time, the speedometer was sending signals for the device being tipped upside down, while the transmitter was fitted on the back of the bird. The last active data showed Berkley being 2 km away from its death, travelling at the speed of 83 km/h, 32 meters above the ground.
Lead by the coordinates sent by the transmitters, our team found the bird dead under a pylon from the power lines near the village of Kamen, some 16 km to the Southeast of the release site.
[/font]
An extremely tragic end ceased the three-year adventures of the bird imported from Spain and released on October 14th 2011 within the Second National Vulture Festival.
The bird was adopted by the Vanchev Family from Plovdiv, who granted funds for the fitting of an expensive GPS/GSM transmitter to help us follow the adaptation and behavior of Berkley into the wild.
The transmitter was the one that helped us reveal the tragic end of the bird several subsequent signals sent on 16-17-18 October 2011 showed that the location of the vulture did not change for hours. At the same time, the speedometer was sending signals for the device being tipped upside down, while the transmitter was fitted on the back of the bird. The last active data showed Berkley being 2 km away from its death, travelling at the speed of 83 km/h, 32 meters above the ground.
Lead by the coordinates sent by the transmitters, our team found the bird dead under a pylon from the power lines near the village of Kamen, some 16 km to the Southeast of the release site.
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Leading Bird Conservation Group Formally Petitions Feds to Regulate Wind Industry [View all]
XemaSab
Dec 2011
OP
Naturally, the American Wind Energy Association cannot be considered entirely neutral in this matter
OKIsItJustMe
Dec 2011
#11
Naturally, however their information here does, in fact, have a high degree of validity.
kristopher
Dec 2011
#13
Federal agency proposes voluntary guidelines for wind power developers to avoid bird deaths
XemaSab
Dec 2011
#4
”The government estimates that a minimum of 440,000 birds are currently killed each year…”
OKIsItJustMe
Dec 2011
#8
Power line pylon killed Berkley the adopted vulture, together with all the hopes of the environmenta
OKIsItJustMe
Dec 2011
#18
Well, the conclusion (in this case) was that transmission lines should be made safer
OKIsItJustMe
Dec 2011
#25
I'm merely saying, it would be inaccurate to say "technology that requires X..."
joshcryer
Dec 2011
#42
Mark Desholm is the leading authority on investigating avian interactions with wind technology
kristopher
Dec 2011
#38