After undergoing sleek upgrades over the past two decades, the iconic wind turbines at Altamont Pass are killing a lot fewer birds.

But they’re still claiming the lives of another important creature of the sky: bats.

As wind farms become an increasingly important source of clean energy, there are growing concerns among scientists about what all the new spinning blades will mean for bats  — particularly the hoary bat, the most widespread migratory bat species in North America.

Hoary bats roost alone in trees, as opposed to caves. That makes them more difficult to track, compounding the problem of understanding their populations. Searching for a tree to roost in is one explanation for their interest in turbines. (Photo credit: Michael Durham/Minden Pictures, Bat Conservation International) 

The controversy is a sobering reminder that the nation’s ambitious efforts to combat climate change will often come with environmental trade-offs and agonizingly difficult solutions.

Winifred Frick, a UC Santa Cruz bat ecologist who has done extensive peer-reviewed research on hoary bat deaths caused by turbines, says North America could lose up to 90% of hoary bats over the next 50 years without aggressive intervention to solve the problem.

“We should be seriously concerned,” said Frick, who is also the chief scientist at Bat Conservation International, a nonprofit based in Austin, Texas. “They have a right to exist.”

Capturing powerful winds off the Pacific, the Altamont Pass Wind Resource Area is a 37,000-acre zone stretching across the tawny hills of eastern Alameda and Contra Costa counties. The wind farm’s construction in the early 1980s marked the beginning of a new era of alternative energy.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration says that 8.4% of the country’s utility power now comes from wind energy. Many energy experts expect that percentage to double by the end of the decade.

When the Altamont wind farm’s turbines first began churning decades ago, environmentalists were alarmed that hawks, eagles and other raptors were being killed by the giant blades.

After conservation groups filed suit, the wind farm’s owners hired environmental consultants and began replacing older equipment with taller, larger turbines in an effort to reduce raptor deaths.

It worked. Independent research showed that turbine-caused deaths of the American kestrel, burrowing owl, golden eagle and red‐tailed hawk were cut in half from 2005 to 2010.

Migratory bats, however, are continuing to die en masse.

In the United States alone, wind turbines are estimated to kill at least half a million bats annually, according to Michael Whitby, a biologist and data analyst at Bat Conservation International. The group says numerous species have been found strewn beneath wind turbines, including the Eastern red bat, silver-haired bat and hoary bat.

Wind turbines kill at least 500,000 bats annually in the U.S., according to Texas-based Bat Conservation International. Hoary bats such as the one above Ñ killed at a wind farm in Pennsylvania Ñ account for more than a third of bat carcasses found near turbines. (Photo by Michael Schirmacher, Bat Conservation International) 

Already threatened by deforestation, hoary bats are the most common casualty, accounting for over a third of bat carcasses found beneath turbines, Frick said.

Most of the deaths occur at night, when the nocturnal bats alight from their tree roosts and cruise through the sky in search of an insect meal, helping to maintain an ecological balance in the sky by feasting on moths and mosquitoes.

With its lush salt-and-pepper fur, the hoary bat has been called the “George Clooney of the bat world.”

“They’re very easy to fall in love with,” said Katrina Smith, an environmental scientist with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. “They fly really far to migrate and they have just two pups a year. They’re worth protecting.”

No one really knows how many hoary bats there are. Because the solitary creatures roost in trees, researchers can’t count them as easily as they do cave-dwelling bats—and they’re tricky to catch and track because of their lengthy flight paths. In autumn, hoary bats migrate south to roost and mate, which is when most turbine deaths occur.

It’s also been difficult for researchers to determine the number of hoary bats being killed by the turbines.

Ecologist Ted Weller of the U.S. Forest Service said the bodies of bats are small and difficult to find. Their mottled silver and brown fur strongly resembles a dead leaf. And with their wings curled around them, they’re about the size of two thumbs. They also decompose quickly and are often snatched by scavengers.

“We know we’re not seeing all of the carcasses,” Weller said.

When they find and inspect dead bats, ecologists often see the bruising or broken wings that are indicative of a run-in with a  turbine. Scientists say they can also be whacked to the ground by the air pressure of a spinning blade, which is the size of three semi-truck trailers.

In a statement to the Bay Area News Group, Stu Webster, a senior official with the American Clean Power Association, said the industry is working with the U.S. Department of Energy, bat experts and conservation groups to reduce the number of bat fatalities.

Because bats use sound waves to interpret their surroundings, some scientists say, the spinning blades might confuse them. Although from afar the turbines appear to be turning relatively slowly — sometimes making only eight revolutions per minute — the tips of the blade are moving nearly 180 mph. That’s too fast for a curious bat to get out of the way.

But why they’re attracted to the turbines in the first place remains a mystery. Some researchers theorize that the animals are looking for good places to mate or roost.

Virtually no conservationists are arguing that wind turbines should be torn down. But they contend that slight tweaks could help prevent thousands of bat deaths.

Despite their 16-inch wingspan, hoary bats are only about 5½ inches long. (Photo credit: Michael Durham/Minden Pictures, Bat Conservation International) 

Because hoary bats are most likely to be active when winds are gentle, bat experts say, cutting operations on nights with low winds can reduce bat deaths at a modest cost to turbine companies.

Restricting the speed at which the turbine blades start up, particularly in the fall, would allow bats to come and go at their peak flying hours without the risk of colliding with a moving blade, some biologists argue. One 2010 study in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment concluded that such curtailment could halve the number of bat deaths, while decreasing the annual profit of wind farms by only 1%.

“We can have wind turbines and bats,” Frick said. “I think that finding ways to operate wind turbines in a way that protects biodiversity and prevents extinctions of bats is part of our commitment to sustainable renewable energy and our fight against climate change.”

Source: www.mercurynews.com