Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas

Cordes, L.S. & May, R. 2023. Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas. NINA Report 2350. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research. Renewable energy developments are expanding offshore in order to meet the world’s energy demands, and floating structures permit pre...

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Main Authors: Cordes, Line, May, Roel
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA) 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3103568
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spelling ftninstnf:oai:brage.nina.no:11250/3103568 2024-02-11T10:06:00+01:00 Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas Cordes, Line May, Roel North Sea, Nordsjøen, Norwegian Sea, Norskehavet 2023 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3103568 eng eng Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA) NINA Report;2350 urn:isbn:978-82-426-5151-8 urn:issn:1504-3312 https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3103568 © Norwegian Institute for Nature Research. The publication may be freely cited where the source is acknowledged 44 bird migration monitoring technologies monitoring plan long-term offshore radar acoustic satellite tracking LiDAR citizen science fugletrekk overvåkingsteknologier overvåkingsplan åpent hav akustisk satellitt sporing folkeforskning Research report 2023 ftninstnf 2024-01-17T23:49:26Z Cordes, L.S. & May, R. 2023. Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas. NINA Report 2350. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research. Renewable energy developments are expanding offshore in order to meet the world’s energy demands, and floating structures permit previously undisturbed areas to be utilised. As a result, there are growing concerns over impacts on migrating birds, however, very little is known about the amount, timing, or position of offshore migration due to the challenges involved in obtaining such data. Long-term monitoring of offshore bird migration is necessary to be able to discriminate inter-annual variability from temporal trends in migration patterns, as well as to capture how migrating species are responding to offshore human developments and climate change. Here we summarise the sensor and non-sensor-based approaches that are suitable for mon-itoring offshore bird migration in the long-term including weather and avian radars, biologging, acoustics, laser scanners, camera technology, and citizen science. Each of these sensor-based and observational-based approaches come with their own strengths and weaknesses in terms of, for example, their spatial and temporal scale and resolution. Biologging, avian radar, and satellite imagery would provide the better offshore coverage, but weather radar and citizen science data are readily available, and if combined, could provide useful information on species-specific numbers of birds migrating towards the sea. We outline a plan including core activities for long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas, including a network of weather radars, network of offshore radio telemetry, citizen science data, and collating information from avian radars at sea. We also propose research and development activities which require piloting, but which could provide important data offshore. These activities include analysis of satellite imagery, network of offshore acoustic monitoring, and utilising LiDAR ... Report Norskehav* Norwegian Sea Norwegian Institute for Nature Research: Brage NINA Norwegian Sea Nordsjøen ENVELOPE(11.435,11.435,64.710,64.710)
institution Open Polar
collection Norwegian Institute for Nature Research: Brage NINA
op_collection_id ftninstnf
language English
topic bird migration
monitoring technologies
monitoring plan
long-term
offshore
radar
acoustic
satellite
tracking
LiDAR
citizen science
fugletrekk
overvåkingsteknologier
overvåkingsplan
åpent hav
akustisk
satellitt
sporing
folkeforskning
spellingShingle bird migration
monitoring technologies
monitoring plan
long-term
offshore
radar
acoustic
satellite
tracking
LiDAR
citizen science
fugletrekk
overvåkingsteknologier
overvåkingsplan
åpent hav
akustisk
satellitt
sporing
folkeforskning
Cordes, Line
May, Roel
Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas
topic_facet bird migration
monitoring technologies
monitoring plan
long-term
offshore
radar
acoustic
satellite
tracking
LiDAR
citizen science
fugletrekk
overvåkingsteknologier
overvåkingsplan
åpent hav
akustisk
satellitt
sporing
folkeforskning
description Cordes, L.S. & May, R. 2023. Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas. NINA Report 2350. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research. Renewable energy developments are expanding offshore in order to meet the world’s energy demands, and floating structures permit previously undisturbed areas to be utilised. As a result, there are growing concerns over impacts on migrating birds, however, very little is known about the amount, timing, or position of offshore migration due to the challenges involved in obtaining such data. Long-term monitoring of offshore bird migration is necessary to be able to discriminate inter-annual variability from temporal trends in migration patterns, as well as to capture how migrating species are responding to offshore human developments and climate change. Here we summarise the sensor and non-sensor-based approaches that are suitable for mon-itoring offshore bird migration in the long-term including weather and avian radars, biologging, acoustics, laser scanners, camera technology, and citizen science. Each of these sensor-based and observational-based approaches come with their own strengths and weaknesses in terms of, for example, their spatial and temporal scale and resolution. Biologging, avian radar, and satellite imagery would provide the better offshore coverage, but weather radar and citizen science data are readily available, and if combined, could provide useful information on species-specific numbers of birds migrating towards the sea. We outline a plan including core activities for long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas, including a network of weather radars, network of offshore radio telemetry, citizen science data, and collating information from avian radars at sea. We also propose research and development activities which require piloting, but which could provide important data offshore. These activities include analysis of satellite imagery, network of offshore acoustic monitoring, and utilising LiDAR ...
format Report
author Cordes, Line
May, Roel
author_facet Cordes, Line
May, Roel
author_sort Cordes, Line
title Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas
title_short Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas
title_full Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas
title_fullStr Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas
title_full_unstemmed Long-term monitoring of bird migration across the North and Norwegian Seas
title_sort long-term monitoring of bird migration across the north and norwegian seas
publisher Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3103568
op_coverage North Sea, Nordsjøen, Norwegian Sea, Norskehavet
long_lat ENVELOPE(11.435,11.435,64.710,64.710)
geographic Norwegian Sea
Nordsjøen
geographic_facet Norwegian Sea
Nordsjøen
genre Norskehav*
Norwegian Sea
genre_facet Norskehav*
Norwegian Sea
op_source 44
op_relation NINA Report;2350
urn:isbn:978-82-426-5151-8
urn:issn:1504-3312
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3103568
op_rights © Norwegian Institute for Nature Research. The publication may be freely cited where the source is acknowledged
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