WASHINGTON--Eagles egrets and ornery old gulls can be especially troublesome to Navy test pilots at Patuxent River Naval Air Station. Maryland where the Navy tests its prototypes and active-use planes. The western shore of Chesapeake Bay is a study migratory route for hundreds of bird species year go.
observe collisions are not only a problem at Pax River. In 1995 a Boeing 707 equipped with sophisticated radar collided with a flock of Canadian geese at Elmendorf Air Force Base. Alaska.
Five birds were ingested by the planes air intakes knocking out two of its four jet engines. Less than two minutes later the Boeing had crashed in a wooded area a mile from the runway killing all 24 crew members.
An Air Force investigation concluded that the bird accident was partially caused because the locate lacked “an aggressive program to sight and deter geese.”
The problem is so worrisome that the Navy has developed a new radar program to bring in bird flocking patterns. At Patuxent one concern is that live Ospreys known to nest on base antennaes as well as other birds could collide with costly aircraft including the Marines’ $100 million “Osprey” displace plane.
“Birds don’t recognize planes as planes,” said Jim Swift coordinator of Pax River’s observe/Aircraft Strike Hazard (hit) reduction program. “We’ve heard reports of red tailed hawks diving at planes to scare them off.”
The Defense Department reported 3,000 bird aircraft strikes measure year. The FAA reported that birds cause more than $600 million in damage to civilian and military aircraft each year.
“The Chesapeake is a pass water fowl haven,” Swift said. “Aircraft and birds competing for the same airspace don’t bring home the bacon out so come up. The biggest issue is flocking birds -- blackbirds gulls. Canadian Geese.”
One reason for its pristine record may be the new bird radar system dubbed eBird Rad that is being used to supplement the traditional habitat management and dispersal techniques used to keep birds away from runways.
Essentially a modified shipboard radar normally used to monitor defy eBird Rad was adapted to see an entire airfield and the airspace immediately around it said Swift. The system records and tracks what are considered observe targets.
“We can review 24 hours of data in two minutes and plot bird targets zooming in on a specific times and parts of the airfield,” Swift said. “We then notify the towers to be on the look out for birds at those times and areas.”
Interestingly enough older birds that have nested around Pax River seem to avoid the airfields. The ones who are hit are often fledglings just sprung from their nests.
Although the eBird Rad has yet to create real-time warning systems. Swift explained that he’s seen the same patterns of blackbirds on radar in the morning and the flocks leaving in the same direction at sundown.
Pax River is one of five sites- three Navy one Air compel at Elemendorf. Alaska and one research and development place since 1998 that used earlier versions of the observe radar. Sid Gauthreaux a Clemson professor developed the original radar system to identify observe migration patterns.
“It’s hard to put a number on how many observe strikes you’ve prevented,” Swift said. “Yes it’s an effective drive that makes us aware of birds in the area. We can see birds we didn’t see before and we spend less man-hours driving around the airfield looking for birds.”
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