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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsLights of 5000 oil rigs threaten migratory birds in Gulf of Mexico
This story was on NPR's Living on Earth program this morning.
http://www.loe.org/shows/shows.html?programID=12-P13-00001#feature4
Tiger Sharks Dine on Migrating Birds
GELLERMAN: Something very strange is happening near oil platforms in the Gulf of Mexico. On dark and overcast nights, migratory birds become stuck in the cones of light from the powerful beacons on the drilling rigs. The birds swoop and circle overhead - flying round and round - until, exhausted - they drop into the sea.
Environmental reporter Ben Raines has written about the unusual and often deadly phenomenon for the Mobile, Alabama, Press-Register:
RAINES: You have to imagine what the platforms are down here. I mean, weve got 5,000 in the Gulf, and theyre out there over a formerly dark ocean, and each one is lit up with several hundred bright, bright flood lights - think of streetlights. Theyre like these beacons out on the horizon. If youve ever been close to a bright light outside like a lantern, you look away from it and you cant see anything and its the same phenomenon on these platforms.
GELLERMAN: So how does that affect the birds?
RAINES: Well, on cloudy nights in particular, where the stars are obscured, birds migrating across the Gulf, which is a long trip - a couple hundred miles, takes 20 to 30 hours - will fly and theyll become sort of disoriented and bamboozled by the lights on the platforms, thinking that those are, you know, navigation cues like stars because they cant see the stars.
And, so, they just start flying in a circle around these platforms, and you have to remember the platforms - some of them are very big. I mean - you know, the top deck might be the size of a football field.
GELLERMAN: So what happens to the birds? They fall onto the platform?
RAINES: Well, some fall onto the platform, some are eaten by migrating raptors - you know, hawks and things, and some are eaten by sharks. We had some scientists here that work out of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab who began dissecting sharks - tiger sharks in particular - and finding a lot of songbirds in them. Brown thrashers, scarlet tanagers, you know, birds you would associate with the woods that could only be out there - 20 and 50 miles offshore - because they are migrating.
....
(more at link)
GELLERMAN: Something very strange is happening near oil platforms in the Gulf of Mexico. On dark and overcast nights, migratory birds become stuck in the cones of light from the powerful beacons on the drilling rigs. The birds swoop and circle overhead - flying round and round - until, exhausted - they drop into the sea.
Environmental reporter Ben Raines has written about the unusual and often deadly phenomenon for the Mobile, Alabama, Press-Register:
RAINES: You have to imagine what the platforms are down here. I mean, weve got 5,000 in the Gulf, and theyre out there over a formerly dark ocean, and each one is lit up with several hundred bright, bright flood lights - think of streetlights. Theyre like these beacons out on the horizon. If youve ever been close to a bright light outside like a lantern, you look away from it and you cant see anything and its the same phenomenon on these platforms.
GELLERMAN: So how does that affect the birds?
RAINES: Well, on cloudy nights in particular, where the stars are obscured, birds migrating across the Gulf, which is a long trip - a couple hundred miles, takes 20 to 30 hours - will fly and theyll become sort of disoriented and bamboozled by the lights on the platforms, thinking that those are, you know, navigation cues like stars because they cant see the stars.
And, so, they just start flying in a circle around these platforms, and you have to remember the platforms - some of them are very big. I mean - you know, the top deck might be the size of a football field.
GELLERMAN: So what happens to the birds? They fall onto the platform?
RAINES: Well, some fall onto the platform, some are eaten by migrating raptors - you know, hawks and things, and some are eaten by sharks. We had some scientists here that work out of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab who began dissecting sharks - tiger sharks in particular - and finding a lot of songbirds in them. Brown thrashers, scarlet tanagers, you know, birds you would associate with the woods that could only be out there - 20 and 50 miles offshore - because they are migrating.
....
(more at link)
Audio is here (scroll down for just this topic): http://www.loe.org/shows/shows.html?programID=12-P13-00001
A light bulb has been developed that gives off green light and doesn't seem to disturb the birds. (See picture at link.) But it is not yet in use in the Gulf of Mexico.
~~~
For those who saw the astroturf anti-wind power article posted in LBN yesterday (since locked since it turns out to not even be current), consider this a bit of a counter. Global warming and other problems from hydrocarbon fuel production and use are more of a problem, overall, for birds than wind power. Although again, where potential problems can be mitigated, they should be - in any energy production scenario.
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Lights of 5000 oil rigs threaten migratory birds in Gulf of Mexico (Original Post)
MH1
Jan 2012
OP
postulater
(5,075 posts)1. I hope they start using those green lights.
Better yet just recycle the platforms.
MH1
(17,600 posts)2. It will take a long time to wean humans from the use of fossil fuels
so in the meantime at least we should be trying to mitigate the damage.
MH1
(17,600 posts)3. kick for later risers. nt