Martin Perrow is Founder and Director of ECON Ecological Consultancy Ltd and currently manages the ornithological requirements of several wind farm sites, assessing the likely impacts and providing advice in order to engineer the co-existence of birds and wind farms with minimal impacts. He has published widely on the subject.
Description
Preface 1. Monitoring birds - K. Shawn Smallwood 2. Monitoring bats - Cris D. Hein 3. Modelling collision risk and populations - Ian Smales 4. Statistical principles of post-construction fatality monitoring design - Manuela Huso, Dan Dalthorp and Fraenzi Korner-Nievergelt 5. Spatial planning - Jenny Bright and Caoimhe Muldoon 6. Mitigation for birds - Roel May 7. Turbine siting for raptors - K. Shawn Smallwood, Lee Neher and Douglas A. Bell 8. Mitigating bat collision - Edward B. Arnett 9. A best practice approach to future planning - Victoria Gartman, Eva Schuster, Johann Koeppel and Martin R. Perrow Index
Reviews
... the editor and the more than 50 authors have made a substantial effort to review current knowledge, which goes a long way to meeting the need for a comprehensive global reference on the subject. -- Henrik Skov * Conservation Biology * ...this is the must read book for everybody interested in wind farms and wildlife, which will be the next step in our better understanding of relationships between renewable energy, wildlife and the environment. -- Wieslaw Bogdanowicz * Acta Chiropterologica * These two books are a major step towards consolidating our current knowledge of potential impacts of wind farms on wildlife, and options for monitoring and mitigation. Coherent structures for each chapter provide easy navigation, and liberal decoration with case studies, figures, tables and photographs, means that the expansive content is easily digestible. A minor quibble may be that volume 2 focuses almost entirely on birds and bats, after laying some important groundwork for other under-studied taxa in volume 1, but as acknowledged, this reflects where most focus has been directed. The call for greater study on population-level monitoring and cumulative effects echoes those of other recent reviews, such as the publication of presentations from the Conference on Wind Energy and Wildlife Impacts held in Berlin in 2015 (Koeppel 2017), which are among the most challenging of aspects to study but are essential to consider. The Editor and the many authors of chapters and cases studies should be congratulated on this important contribution to the field. The next two offshore volumes are highly anticipated. -- Chris Thaxter * BTO Bird Study * ... the best currently available synthesis of knowledge regarding impacts of onshore wind farms on birds. It is an obligatory read for all interested in the subject of wind energy-bird interactions. * Acta Ornithologica *

