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DateTitreDurée
30 Jun 2022Wildlife strikes in a time of COVID-1900:52:25

In April 2020 COVID-induced travel restrictions reduced aircraft movements by 80% globally, which was unarguably the greatest challenge the aviation industry has ever faced. But how did the sudden downturn in aircraft activity influence wildlife using airports? And what did this look like for strike numbers and rates?

Joining Kylie Patrick in this episode is aviation professional Dan Parsons who has been keenly analyzing strikes and aircraft movement data throughout the pandemic

Dan Parsons - LinkedIn

The Runway Centreline blog page

FAA presentation at the World Birdstrike Association conference

ICAO COVID-19 related ATS mitigations to potential hazards

ICAO COVID-19 economic impact

Corona virus impact on the aviation industry worldwide

Journal: Human-Wildlife Interactions

01 Sep 2021How to manage Masked Lapwings (Plovers)00:41:29

Kylie Patrick is joined by Martin Ziviani (Senior Wildlife Biologist) to talk about a particularly problematic and territorial species, the Masked Lapwing (Vanellus miles). They introduce lapwings, discuss why they are a strike risk, and talk about approaches to managing them on airports.

Masked Lapwing call (source)

Masked Lapwings

Lapwings around the world

ATSB Australian aviation wildlife strike statistics 2008 – 2017

01 Jun 2021Identifying birds and why you should00:34:36
09 Nov 2023Investigating significant strikes00:46:39

Although most wildlife strikes do not result in significant damage or catastrophic consequences, having a well-defined system for investigation when this does occur will help explain why the strike occurred, how it may be avoided in the future, and it may even be useful is cases of litigation. Significant strike investigations collect key data relating to the species, the aircraft, the airport, meteorological conditions, and so on, to provide a complete picture of the strike event. Dr Jeff McKee joins Kylie Patrick to talk about the how and why of strike investigation.

01 Mar 2021Using dogs to disperse wildlife00:33:32

Kylie Patrick is joined by Martin Ziviani, Senior Wildlife Biologist for  Avisure. In this Avicast episode, Kylie and Marty talk about using dogs on airports to disperse wildlife. They discuss what's involved in finding the right dog, training the dog and handler, and some of the risks and challenges with using dogs on airports.

Joe the Wonder Dog

Craig Murray Dog Training 

Border Collies at Dover AFB

31 Oct 2021Wildlife strikes in the USA with John Weller from the FAA01:13:12

John Weller joined the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in 2009 as a National Wildlife Biologist just weeks after the ditching of Flight 1549 in the Hudson River. In this episode he talks to Kylie Patrick about his role with the FAA and the protocols they have in place to help airports identify and manage wildlife hazards throughout the United States.

FAA wildlife strike database

FAA wildlife resources

AC150/5200-32 Reporting Wildlife Aircraft Strikes

AC150/5200-33 Hazardous Wildlife Attractants On or Near Airports

AC150/5200-34 Construction or Establishment of Landfills near Public Airports

AC150/5200-36 Qualifications for Wildlife Biologists

AC150/5200-38 Protocol for the Conduct and Review of Wildlife Hazard Site Visits, Wildlife Hazard Assessments, and Wildlife Hazard Management Plans

AC150/5220-25 Airport Avian Radar Systems

Flight 1549 NTSB Accident Report

31 Mar 2022Dispersing wildlife on airports01:08:21
17 Feb 2021Hello and welcome to Avicast00:36:56

Avisure's Principal Consultant, Kylie Patrick, is joined by Phil Shaw, Managing Director of Avisure and Ecosure. In this first episode, Kylie and Phil talk about what listeners can expect from Avicast, introduce the global wildlife strike database, and discuss some of the strengths and challenges in the way the aviation industry approaches wildlife hazard management.

Wildlife strike database

Calbraith Rodgers

Miracle on the Hudson

Miracle on the corn field

Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 B737-8 (MAX) March 2019

03 Jul 2023Using lethal control to manage hazardous wildlife on airports00:34:43

Martin Ziviani and Kylie Patrick discuss the complexities of using lethal control to manage hazardous wildlife on airports.

01 Nov 2022How to manage Little Corellas00:41:30

Kylie Patrick is joined by Tony Goodwin (Avisure Wildlife Management Officer ) and Shane Van Dijk (Avisure Wildlife Biologist) to talk about Little Corella, the risk they pose and the best approach to managing these charasmatic but problematic birds. Little Corella (Australian Museum) Little Corellas: Social and Ecological Research for Management in South Australia ABC News Australia: Wildlife experts question why huge corella flocks on coast

Little Corella (Australian Museum)

Little Corellas: Social and ecological research for management in South Australia

ABC News Australia: Wildlife experts question why huge corella flocks on coast

22 Jul 2022Bonus: AAWHG Forum 2022!00:01:22
30 Sep 2021Wildlife Strike Committees: The Australian example00:41:37

The Australian Aviation Wildlife Hazard Group (AAWHG) is formally recognised as Australia’s primary aviation wildlife hazard management reference body and fulfils Australia’s commitment to have a national bird strike committee as recommended by the International Civil Aviation Organization. Full of expertise from a cross-section of industry, the AAWHG are a go-to for the Australian aviation industry. AAWHG’s chair, Ash McAlpine, joins Kylie Patrick to talk about what they do.

AAWHG October 2021 Webinar Series

Plane Wild (AAWHG newsletter)

Resources

Recommended Practices

ICAO and AAWHG Webinar 1

ICAO and AAWHG Webinar 2

02 Aug 2021Assessing the wildlife strike risk00:49:09

Kylie is joined by Phil Shaw, Avisure’s Managing Director. Phil is one of the leading experts in wildlife risk assessment and mitigation in aviation, and in this episode, Kylie and Phil talk about the basics of assessing wildlife risks on airports and why it's important.

John Allan Risk Assessment

Richard Dolbeer 1

Richard Dolbeer 2

28 Feb 2023How to manage ducks00:35:56

Alexandra Stone joins Kylie Patrick to talk about how to best manage ducks on and off airports.

31 Dec 2021Training for Wildlife Hazard Management00:59:11

When it comes to managing wildlife hazards on airports, you want to make sure that whoever is doing that management, knows what they are doing. And just like every other aspect of aviation safety management, training is critical. In this episode Kylie Patrick (Principal Consultant) is joined by Jeff Follet (General Manager for Avisure Services) and they talk about what training requirements look like around the world, and what it should look like. A must-listen-to episode for anyone that needs training and for those who are developing and delivering it.

FAA Advisory Circular 150_5200-36

Australia CASA Manual of Standards Part 139

Australian Aviation Wildlife Hazard Group - Recommended Practice 5.1.1 Training and Competency

Canada CAR 322

Brazil RBAC 153

ICAO Doc 9137

EASA Rules for Aerodromes

Transport Canada - Sharing the Skies

Transport Canada - Wildlife Control Procedures Manual

18 Feb 2021Managing kangaroos on airports00:35:35

Avisure's Principal Consultant, Kylie Patrick is joined by our Principal Biologist/Regional Manager, Will Jamieson. In this episode Kylie and Will talk about a uniquely Australian issue, kangaroos on airports. They discuss the significant strike risk associated with such a large terrestrial mammal and how airports can manage the risk, with a particular emphasis on good fences to exclude them from airside areas. 

Kangaroos

Caselaw: Five Star Medical Centre Pty Ltd v Kempsey Shire Council

30 Jun 2021How to manage Fairy Martins00:36:52

Avisure’s Principal Consultant, Kylie Patrick, is joined by our Wildlife Biologist, Alexandra Stone. In this episode, Kylie and Alex talk about a small but very common bird on Australian airports, Fairy Martins (Petrochelidon ariel). They discuss how to identify them from other similar species, their strike risk, and ways to manage them.

Fairy Martin

Tree Martin

Welcome Swallow

30 Nov 2022See you next year00:00:22

Avisure is taking a break over the holidays but we'll be back with more great epsiodes from February 2023

31 Aug 2022How to manage Tree Martins00:38:13

In one of our earlier Avicast episodes, we talked about a very small, but very common bird on Australian airports, the Fairy Martin. This little aerial forager is often mistaken for any number of little aerial foragers, including the topic of this episode, the Tree Martin. Alexandra Stone, Avisure's Wildlife Biologist, is back in the co-host chair to talk all about the Tree Martin and how to best manage them. 

Tree Martin

31 Jan 2022Managing wildlife at Vancouver International Airport, Canada01:15:49
Vancouver International Airport, Canada’s second busiest airport, sits on Sea Island in the Fraser River Delta where the marshes, mudflats and agriculture habitats on and around the delta attract millions of shorebirds, and thousands of waterfowl and gulls each year. To manage the wildlife strike risk associated with these hazards, the airport has in place one of the most comprehensive wildlife management programs in the world. Joining Kylie in this episode to talk about this program is David Bradbeer, YVR’s Wildlife Program Specialist, and from Avisure Services, Tyler Rogers, who is the Site Manager for YVR’s wildlife management program. YVR wildlife program

Avisure Services

Pacific Northwest Raptors

Downriver Farm

Hungarian Mudi

Fraser River Delta

Snow Goose

Mallard

Glaucous-winged Gull

Green-winged Teal

Great Blue Heron

Red-tailed Hawk

Rough-legged Hawk

Short-eared Owl

Barn Owl

Bald Eagle

Barn Swallow

Coyote

30 Apr 2023How to do a bird count00:39:55

Counting birds on airports is one of the standard elements of an airport's wildlife management program. This data can be used to measure the progress and effectiveness of your program, identify emerging issues, and assess risks. But these counts need to be well established and implemented to have any benefit. Martin Ziviani (Snr Wildlife Biologist) joins Kylie Patrick (Principal Consultant) to talk about the how and why to set up and do bird counts on airports

31 Aug 2023Managing wildlife at Melbourne Airport, Australia00:34:44

Melbourne Airport is the primary airport serving Melbourne, Australia. With the upcoming addition of their third runway, they will be facilitating more than 77 million passenger movements and 429,000 aircraft movements each year. And their current wildlife management program is in a very good position to manage any increase to the wildlife strike risk. In this episode, Kylie Patrick talks to Fiona Beach (Airfield Safety and Operations Coordinator) and Bevin Buchanan (Senior Airside Safety Officer) from Melbourne Airport about their wildlife issues and how their program is managing them.

Melbourne Airport Wildlife Hazard Management Policy

Melbourne Airport LinkedIn

 

19 Feb 2021Wildlife hazard management from the regulator's perspective with Nick Yearwood01:00:40

Kylie Patrick is joined by Nick Yearwood, a freelance aviation consultant from the UK (International Birdstrike) who worked for the UK's Civil Aviation Authority for 36 years. Nick's regulatory experience spans oversight/compliance, policy decision making with international influencing, working with airport operators, global air carriers, and ground handling organisations. As a regulator, he spent many years working with airports around the UK and EU on wildlife  hazard management, and in this episode Kylie and Nick talk about the role of the regulator in aviation wildlife hazard management.

CAP 772 Wildlife Hazard Management at Aerodromes

31 Jul 2022How to manage Canada Geese00:47:42

Kylie Patrick is joined by Avisure's Principal Biologist, Will Jamieson and Wildlife Biologist Tyler Rogers to talk all things Canada Geese. These geese have been implicated in some of the most spectacular and serious strike incidents, and in this episode we talk about how to best manage them.

FAA Wildlife Strike Report 1990-2020

NTSB Investigation Report - Miracle on the Hudson

Canada Geese range maps

Birds of the World - Canada Geese

Skybrary - Some significant wildlife strikes civil aircraft USA 1990-2021

31 May 2022How to manage flying-foxes01:06:58

Dr Jeff McKee, Avisure’s Director of Research & Development joins Kylie Patrick to talk about large bats called flying-foxes. Infringing critical airspace sometimes in their thousands, they can present a serious strike risk, and are difficult for airports to manage, not just because of their numbers but also because they rarely use the airport itself as a resource. In this episode we introduce the flying-fox, why they are a strike risk, and how airports and other aviation stakeholders can mitigate their risk.

Australian flying-foxes

Australian flying-fox distribution

Flying-foxes (general)

National monitoring program

Australian Bat Lyssavirus

Hendra Virus

Western Sydney University Animal Ecology Lab Justin Welbergen

30 Nov 2021How to manage Australian White Ibis01:03:17

Australian White Ibis (Threskiornis molucca) are a problem at many Australian airports, but managing ibis off-airport is the key to managing them on-airport. In this episode we join the collective experience from Avisure and our sister company Ecosure to talk about ibis management. Joining Kylie is Martin Ziviani (Senior Wildlife Biologist), and our very special guest Carla McKevitt (Ecologist) from Ecosure.

Ecosure

Ibis management (Ecosure)

Australian White Ibis

Straw-necked Ibis

Adult call copyright Fraser Simpson and Chick call copyright Pritam Baruah

01 Nov 2022Managing off-airport wildlife hazards00:45:36

Avisure CEO, Jeff Follett, joins Kylie Patrick to talk about how and why off-airport land uses can significantly elevate an airport’s strike risk because of the wildlife they attract. They talk about the types of land uses that are problematic and how to work with land users and land use planners to mitigate risks and safeguard airports.

National Airports Safeguarding Framework (Australia)

ICAO Airport Planning Manual Land Use and Environmental Management Doc 9184 Part2

ICAO Airport Services Manual Part III Wildlife Hazard Management Doc 9137

Civil Aviation Authority (UK) CAP 772 Wildlife Hazard Management at Aerodromes

Christchurch City Council District Plan

30 Apr 2022Why good data equals good management00:36:45
As an airport, you may have in place a fully integrated and well-resourced management program, but … how do you know it’s working? The answer is data. The most objective and informed way to measure the progress of your program is to review and analyse your data against the targets and goals you have set. But not all data is reliable, and not all data capture methods are equal. In this episode Kylie is joined by Avisure's Wildlife Biologist, Alexandra Stone, to talk about good data and data collection apps. Fulcrum

AVCRM 

Airside Tracker

Tap Forms

Noggin

30 Apr 2021Wildlife hazards from the pilot's perspective with Capt. Brian Greeves01:07:37

In this episode Kylie Patrick is joined by Captain Brian Greeves, Director of Aviation Solutions and a safety and technical consultant for the Australian & International Pilots Associations. We discuss some of the challenges pilots face when confronted with wildlife hazards and identify gaps in training to help pilots mitigate strikes.

For the audio transmission shared in this episode, we note that there is no intended criticism of the crew or ATC. Rather, we see these examples as important learning experiences to help inform future decision making relating to wildlife hazard management in aviation.  

Aviation Solutions

Australian Airline Pilots' Association

Kalitta Air - European Kestrel strike

Flying-foxes

Australian Aviation Wildlife Hazard Group Recommended Practice: Flight Crew – Training and Competency

Australian Aviation Wildlife Hazard Group Recommended Practice: Phraseology

Bruce MacKinnon legacy: Sharing the Skies

31 Mar 2021The golden rules of managing wildlife on airports00:26:52

In this episode Kylie Patrick is joined again by our Principal Biologist, Will Jamieson, where they talk about some key rules airports should consider if they want their wildlife hazard management programs to be effective.

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