Driving through Banff last summer, I had a chance to see the overpasses
built in the park. They were somewhat
over engineered but certainly did the job.
What these numbers make obvious is that the animals soon learn of the
overpass or for that matter the various forms of underpass and the related game
trails are quickly adjusted to take full advantage of them.
Raccoons really do not talk to
foxes, but have no difficulty on following another’s passage. Camera work has long since shown that game trails
are busy places indeed so long as no humans are about.
Certainly underpasses and good fencing
is an economic method to control animals from attempting to cross highways.
On the other hand we are not far
away from been able to fully sensorize a right of way and link the information
back to oncoming traffic to practice simple evasion. We certainly need to do that in Newfoundland were car - moose
events are now endemic.
The safe way for
animals to cross the road…
Underpasses
seem to work
December 2011: Design features such as
overpasses keep drivers moving safely on our highways, letting cars pass in
different directions without interacting with other cars or trains. Allowing
wildlife to move from one side of the road to the other without encountering
vehicle traffic is a challenge for transportation planners and wildlife
managers. As transportation networks continue to expand, a similar solution may
help avoid wildlife-vehicle collisions.
A new study rates the effectiveness of highway
underpasses for wildlife. Researchers found that the cost of building these
underpasses in the highway proved to be a savings of property and life.
Bringing
together black bears and cars...
Collisions between wildlife and vehicles can cause substantial damage to vehicles and injure – or even kill – people. Wildlife doesn't fare much better. High mortality due to vehicles can affect the viability of some small populations of animals.
A new route planned for U.S. Highway 64 in Washington County , North Carolina ,
gave researchers the opportunity to document wildlife activity both before and
after the road was built. The new route cut through a forested and agricultural
area, bringing together cars and resident animals such as black bears, red
wolves, and white-tailed deer.
Part of the highway construction included three underpasses with fencing running alongside the roadways near each underpass to ‘funnel' the animals through.
With the use of multiple cameras and surveys
of animal tracks, researchers counted wildlife activity both in the planning
and construction stages of the highway and after it was completed and open to
traffic. Before road construction, the cameras captured 242 instances of deer
passing through the area where the underpasses would be.
New
'funnel' saw 60 per cent reduction in animal deaths
During a 13-month period after construction, 2,433 photographs of various animals, primarily deer, but also bears, raccoons, and domestic dogs and cats, were taken as they used the underpasses. Animal deaths from vehicle collisions were counted as well.
When compared with reports from adjacent
sections of U.S. Highway
64, the new section of road experienced a 58 per cent reduction in wildlife
mortality.
Improvements to further reduce
wildlife-vehicle collisions include continuous fencing along roads rather than
small sections, higher fences, and fences dug into the ground to prevent
smaller animals from going underneath. Drainage culverts placed at more frequent
intervals, rather than larger underpasses built farther apart, could provide a
more economical way to allow animals to pass under the road.
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