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Animal Issues

speaking animal issues

Speaking Animal Issues

The fox, deer and frog voice their opinions and facts on wind turbines and the effects on their habitats.

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Wind Farm

Wind Farms

Studies carried out on the impact of existing offshore turbines suggest many animals do not hear their low-frequency noise. Yet it's important to consider the potential impacts of offshore wind farm developments on coastal animals and how their habitat might be impacted by increased erosion or accretion.

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seal death

Wind farm clue to horrific 'corkscrew' seal deaths 

Experts probing the so-called 'corkscrew deaths' of seals on Britain's East Coast believe the building of a huge offshore wind farm could be to blame. 

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impact on waterfowl

Impacts of wind turbines on waterfowl

Ducks Unlimited Canada (DUC) recognizes, however, that all forms of power generation entail environmental trade-offs, and that there are drawbacks to alternatives including wind turbine developments.

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Trail of Deceit

Animals / Birds / Bats

It has to be remembered that within these sensitive habitats where almost no background noise is experienced, the low frequency noise and vibration projected (and transmitted through the earth) by industrial wind turbine operation is most certainly threatening or confusing to wildlife.

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Friends of Animals

Friends of Animals

Unfortunately, some existing wind farms are located on important bird migration areas, bat migration areas, or both. The result? Thousands of raptors and bats are killed when they fly into moving turbine blades.

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Bat Lungs Explode

Bat Lungs Explode

"Beware: exploding lungs" is not a sign one would expect to see at a wind farm. But a new study suggests this is the main reason bats die in large numbers around wind turbines.

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Drowning in Blood / Bats

Drowning in Blood / Bats

University of Calgary researchers provide answers to the mysterious deaths of bats and wind turbine facilities in souther Alberta, Canada.

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Batting Thousands in Wisconsin

Batting Thousands in Wisconsin

The forty-four turbine site located along the forested Backbone mountaintop was found to be slaughtering bats at annual rates of over 50 bats per turbine with some estimates placing the count at close to 100 bats. High mortality was also observed that year at the Meyersdale wind farm in Pennsylvania, another FPL project.

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Marine Animals

Marine Animals

Tidal power from free-running, propeller driven generators is not a free energy gift. There will be environmental costs extracted from the fisheries and tourism of Nova Scotia, which your readers should know.

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Endangered Species

Endangered Species

In Canada, more than 500 wild animal and plant species are considered "at risk" according to the Committee on the Status of Endangered Species in Canada (COSEWIC). Nearly 40 percent of these species are found in Ontario. Some urban and rural activities, including expanding residential development, pose significant threats to Ontario's wildlife.

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Habitat Fragmentation

Habitat Fragmentation

A particular wind turbine company in the area has been claiming that they will only place towers on reclaimed strip mines in Western Maryland, reusing land stripped of resources. It sounds like a good idea, turning an abused piece of land into something productive and supposedly environmentally friendly. But that's not the whole truth, and it's not just about the deaths of migrating birds and bats. It's about habitat fragmentation and the effects these windmills, and indeed any major development, will have on forested lands.

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Impact on Wildlife

Impact on Wildlife

Do birds nest on wind turbines?
Is the lower rpm of modern wind turbines safer for birds and bats?
How do wind turbines affect birds?

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Animals and Wind

Animals and Wind

Several dozen people who turned out for a public forum last night on the effects of wind turbines on wildlife witnessed something seldom seen in the three-year plus debate over the Cape Wind project - expert opinion devoid of hyperbole and emotion.

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Effects on Animals

Effects on Animals

I've been woken up by the turbines .I can also hear the sound of killdeer outside, and it occurs to me that this isn't the first time I've heard them at strange hours of the night. They seem especially agitated right now, and it strikes me that they, these birds that roost on the ground, are feeling what I'm feeling, perhaps to an even larger degree since they have direct contact to the ground.

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Avian Cuisinarts

Avian Cuisinarts

Wind developers minimize the risk turbines pose to birds by pointing out that more birds are killed each year by cars, cats, buildings, etc. than turbines. What they don't point out is that there are many millions of cars, cats and buildings, while there are only thousands of turbines currently operating in the world.

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Heightened Sensitivities

Heightened Sensitivities

Authorities and politicians in Ontario have been repeatedly warned that industrial wind turbines are having an adverse effect on the health of those living nearby.

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Arran Lake Study

Arran Lake Study

Commercial wind power is intended to supply renewable energy without harming the environment. But biologists have discovered growing evidence of harm to migratory birds and long-term degrading effects on the quality of sensitive wildlife habitats.

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Against Wind Farms - Isle of Lewis

Against Wind Farms

The following "open letter" offers a good example of how governments cynically sacrifice our avian biodiversity (and much more) to help wind farm developers. Cheating with science, manipulating mortality predictions, covering up bird & bat-kill statistics, these are current practices in Scotland and most European countries.

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Careless Eagles

Careless Eagles

A dead Bald Eagle was found about 40 metres from an industrial wind turbine in Norfolk County last year. The eagle's body was sent to Bird Studies Canada and then to the MNR. An examination of the carcass showed it had injuries consistent with a sudden impact while toxicology tests indicated it was otherwise healthy. "Sault Star"

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Wildlife Hinders

Wildlife Hinders Wind Development

Two recent high-profile decisions on wind development and wildlife mean that developers looking to develop wind farms on sites considered endangered bat territory in the Eastern United States might consider getting an Incidental Take Permit (ITP) to eliminate any risk, while Wyoming's sage grouse rules still dominate in Western U.S.

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