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Wind farms are known to be harmful to birds, disrupting their migration patterns and causing above average death rates (AFP Photo/PATRICIA CASTELLANOS) |
Paris (AFP)
- Wind farms act as a top "predator" in some ecosystems, harming
birds at the top of the food chain and triggering a knock-on effect overlooked
by green energy advocates, scientists said Monday.
Wind is the
fastest-growing renewable energy sector, supplying around four percent of
global electricity demand.
Close to 17
million hectares -- an area roughly the size of Tunisia -- is currently used
for generating wind energy worldwide, and researchers warned that developers
had "greatly underestimated" the impact the technology has on
wildlife.
In new
research, an international team of scientists studied the effects of wind
turbine use in the Western Ghats, a UNESCO-listed range of mountains and forest
spanning India's west coast region and a global "hotspot" of
biodiversity.
They found
that predatory raptor birds were four times rarer in areas of plateau where
wind turbines were present, a disruption that cascaded down the food chain and
radically altered the density and behaviour of the birds' prey.
In
particular, the team observed an explosion in the raptors' favourite meal,
fan-throated lizards, in areas dominated by the turbines.
Furthermore,
they saw significant changes in lizard behaviour and appearance, living as they
were in an essentially predator-free environment.
"What
was remarkable to us were the subtle changes in behaviour, morphology, and
physiology of those lizards," Maria Thaker, assistant professor at the
Indian Institute of Science's Centre for Ecological Sciences and lead study
author, told AFP.
As the
levels of raptors fell around the turbines, so too did the rate of predatory
attacks the lizards had to deal with.
As a
result, the team found that lizards living in and around wind farms had
lessened their vigilance against possible danger.
Simulating
"predator attacks", humans in the study could get up to five times
closer to a lizard in the wind farm zones than one living away from the
turbines before the creatures fled.
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Graphic on
how a lizard species has been found to thrive in an
area where wind farms have
caused the deaths of raptors that
prey on them (AFP Photo/John SAEKI)
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'Be smart
with green energy'
After
testing, the lizards near windmills were found to have lower levels of a stress
hormone, something that must have emerged in the two decades since wind farms
were built in the Western Ghats.
Wind farms
are known to be harmful to birds, disrupting their migration patterns and
causing above average death rates.
Thaker said
her research, published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, showed
that wind farms replicated the role of the top predator in the food chain by
keeping the raptors at bay.
"They
trigger changes to the balance of animals in an ecosystem as if they were top
predators," she said.
"They
are the 'predators' of raptors -- not in the sense of killing them, but by
reducing the presence of raptors in those areas."
As man-made
carbon emissions continue to rise, Thaker said wind energy was vital in
mitigating the effects of climate change.
But with
evidence that the impact of wind farms reaches further into Earth's ecosystems
than previously thought, she called for greater consideration of the
environmental impact of the vital green energy source.
"It
took decades for scientists to realise that wind-turbines were negatively
affecting animals that fly," Thaker said.
"We
need to be smart about how we deploy green energy solutions. Let's reduce our
footprint on the planet and put turbines in places that are already disturbed
in some way -- on buildings for example."
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