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Brokering a settlement between eagles and industry: sustainable management of large raptors nesting on power infrastructure

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 May 2013

ANDREW R. JENKINS*
Affiliation:
Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa.
KOOS H. DE GOEDE
Affiliation:
Birds of Prey Programme, Endangered Wildlife Trust, Private Bag X11, Parkview 2122, South Africa.
LOVELATER SEBELE
Affiliation:
Avisense Consulting, 5 Osmond Close, Simon’s Town 7975, South Africa.
MEGAN DIAMOND
Affiliation:
Wildlife & Energy Programme, Endangered Wildlife Trust, Private Bag X11, Parkview 2122, South Africa.
*
*Author for correspondence; email: andrew@avisense.co.za
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Summary

In the Karoo region of South Africa, eagles nesting on high voltage power pylons are responsible for frequent short-circuits or faults, which reduce the quality of commercial power supply and escalate costs to the country’s energy supplier, Eskom. Between 2002 and 2006 we conducted annual helicopter surveys of eagle nests on 1,400 km of power line and located 139 large nest structures, making up 96 eagle territories occupied by three species: Martial Eagle Polemaetus bellicosus (66 pairs), Verreaux’s Eagle Aquila verreauxii (13 pairs) and Tawny Eagle Aquila rapax (17 pairs), and detailed 357 pair-years of breeding activity, including 241 breeding attempts. Roost sites and active nests were associated with line faulting, and more so at particular pylon configurations. We developed a three-step management plan to reduce eagle-related faulting while still accommodating eagles on the power lines: (i) all (potentially) problematic nests were relocated from high-risk positions above the power conductors, to specially provided platforms placed below the conductors; (ii) perch deterrents were installed above the conductors on all nest pylons and on high-risk pylons up to 10 structures on both sides of each nest tower; and (iii) the welfare of the eagles was monitored before and after management. In this way, line faulting was reduced on actively managed lines by > 75%, with no obvious deleterious effects on the eagle population. The study revealed that: (i) power lines can support substantial breeding populations of threatened large raptors, (ii) these birds can be a source of commercially significant line faulting, and (iii) nest relocations and perch deterrents are effective in reducing faulting without negatively impacting eagle populations.

Information

Type
Research Articles
Copyright
Copyright © BirdLife International 2013 
Figure 0

Figure 1. The location of the study area in south-western South Africa, showing the layout of the surveyed electricity transmission pylon lines in relation to Eskom substations.

Figure 1

Figure 2. The three main transmission pylon configurations supporting the power lines included in this study: (a) IVI configuration, with the outer conductors suspended vertically below the cross-arm, (b) VVV configuration, with all three conductors suspended by two, angled insulator strings, and (c) Strain configuration, with all three conductors tensioned directly on to the cross-arm.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Eagle-related line faulting on Karoo transmission lines plotted against the density of active nests for the period 2002–2004 (pre-management).

Figure 3

Table 1. Evaluation of the use of VVV pylon structures (vs other tower designs) as nest sites by large eagles in relation to their estimated availability on each of the Karoo transmission lines surveyed. Statistically significant preferences for VVV structures are denoted by ** (P < 0.01) and *** (P < 0.001).

Figure 4

Figure 4. The relative frequency with which large eagles were observed roosting above vs below the transmission line conductors in relation to nest position. A significantly greater proportion of eagles with nests in the pylon waist roosted below the conductors (Fisher Exact Test, P = 0.006) than those with nests on top of pylons.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Eagle-related line faulting and eagle breeding activity in each year of the study for managed (2005–2006 only) and unmanaged lines.

Figure 6

Figure 6. The proportion of surveyed eagle pairs actively breeding in each year on the three sets of managed power lines. Note: the lines were not surveyed in 2007 and 2008.