Injury and mortality statistics suggest that bald eagles entering the air space of wind energy facilities face considerable risk. To mitigate the hazard, acoustic deterrent systems designed to discourage entry… Click to show full abstract
Injury and mortality statistics suggest that bald eagles entering the air space of wind energy facilities face considerable risk. To mitigate the hazard, acoustic deterrent systems designed to discourage entry into such hazardous air spaces are under consideration. In this study, the acoustic properties of a collection of call types within the eagle vocal repertoire are reported as a first step in a larger program of study designed to assess the deterrent capacity of the bird’s natural vocal utterances. To that end, calls were recorded from bald eagles housed in the Raptor Center at the University of Minnesota. Based on preliminary acoustic analyses, at least five calls were identified and are referred to here as peal/scream, chatter/cackle, snort, squeal and grunt. With the exception of the low frequency grunt, calls were uniformly high pitched, tonal in nature, exhibited harmonic spectral structure, and they were generally complex, exhibiting distinct nonlinear characteristics. In this presentation, the spectrotemporal properties of each call type will be described with the goal of generating an acoustic repository to enable the consistent classification of calls to be tested for their potential as deterrence signals. [This work was supported by Department of Energy grant #DE-EE0007881.]Injury and mortality statistics suggest that bald eagles entering the air space of wind energy facilities face considerable risk. To mitigate the hazard, acoustic deterrent systems designed to discourage entry into such hazardous air spaces are under consideration. In this study, the acoustic properties of a collection of call types within the eagle vocal repertoire are reported as a first step in a larger program of study designed to assess the deterrent capacity of the bird’s natural vocal utterances. To that end, calls were recorded from bald eagles housed in the Raptor Center at the University of Minnesota. Based on preliminary acoustic analyses, at least five calls were identified and are referred to here as peal/scream, chatter/cackle, snort, squeal and grunt. With the exception of the low frequency grunt, calls were uniformly high pitched, tonal in nature, exhibited harmonic spectral structure, and they were generally complex, exhibiting distinct nonlinear characteristics. In this presentation, the...
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.