Aviation securityLooking at planes with bird's eye could cut collisions with aircraft
Aircraft collisions with wildlife — primarily birds — is a serious and growing threat to civil and military aviation, as well as an expensive one: bird strikes cost civil aviation alone more than $1.2 billion a year world-wide
Using lights to make aircraft more visible to birds could help reduce the risk of bird strikes, new research by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has found. The study, which examined how Canada geese responded to different radio-controlled model aircraft, is the first of its kind and is published in the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Applied Ecology.
Aircraft collisions with wildlife — primarily birds — is a serious and growing threat to civil and military aviation, as well as an expensive one: bird strikes cost civil aviation alone more than $1.2 billion a year world-wide.
A Wiley release reports that although almost all efforts to prevent bird strikes focus on the airport environment, the fate of US Airways flight 1549 — which was forced to make a dramatic landing in the Hudson River in New York in 2009 after several Canada geese were sucked into its engines — shows that effectively reducing bird strikes requires developing strategies that work far beyond the airport perimeter.
Now, a team of researchers from the USDA, Indiana State University, and Purdue University, is taking a bird’s eye view of the problem. According to Dr. Bradley Blackwell of the USDA’s National Wildlife Research Center: “Birds see so much differently than humans do, so we cannot translate our own perceptual understanding to the problem of birds avoiding aircraft.”
Using knowledge about birds’ visual systems, the team tested the response of Canada geese to three radio-controlled aircraft: the first with lights off, the second with lights on, and the third painted to resemble a bird of prey.
They found geese respond more quickly to the threat of an approaching model aircraft when its lights were on, making it more visible to the birds.
The study also found that the geese were just as cautious of the standard radio-controlled aircraft as the predator model, an important finding. According to Blackwell: “Because Canada geese will respond to aircraft approach as a potential threat, the theory behind how animals respond to predators is very applicable to understanding the response to aircraft approach, and we can enhance this response via lighting.”
The research — the first to combine visual sensory ecology with anti-predator behavior — could set the aviation industry on the right track to developing lighting systems that will reduce the rate of bird strikes.
Next, the team hopes to expand their understanding of the visual ecology of other bird species commonly struck by aircraft, so they can design aircraft lighting that will be seen by a range of species. “This is only the first step. As well as lighting, we also want to understand how to manipulate aircraft paint schemes so that birds find them easier to detect. It’s exciting work,” he says.
— Read more in Bradley F. Blackwell et al. “Exploiting avian vision with aircraft lighting to reduce bird strikes,” Journal of Applied Ecology (10 July 2012) (doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2012.02165.x)