WILDLIFE OVERPASSES CAN BE IMPROVED

Environmental Panorama
International
July of 2011


Scientists from NERI, Aarhus University, have shown that roe deer and red foxes as well as several small mammals use the constructed wildlife overpasses across route 18 Herning in Jutland. However, the scientists also give advice to how wildlife overpasses might be improved.

Large infrastructures like roads have direct and indirect impact on wildlife. Roads may restrict the animals’ dispersal and habitat use. To reduce the fragmentation of the landscape, fauna passages are constructed to allow the wildlife and other fauna a safe dispersal route across the road barrier. Experimental studies of the efficiency of large fauna passages have not been performed. Monitoring of the animals’ use of fauna passages are needed to optimise the design of new fauna passages.

Monitoring of the use of the three wildlife overpasses at Herning by mammals showed that roe deer and red fox crossed the overpasses most regularly. Brown hare, badger and medium-sized mustelids only crossed the overpasses occasionally. Among the small mammal species yellow-necked mouse, harvest mouse and common shrew were recorded most often. Pygmy shrew, bank vole, field vole, common vole, wood mouse were recorded in low numbers. Some of the yellow-necked mice and a bank vole crossed the overpasses during the study. Daubenton’s bat, serotine, Nathusius' pipistrelle, noctule and parti-coloured bat were detected, but the activity of bats was generally low in the area. It was not possible to conclude whether the bats cross the road along the overpasses.

The three wildlife overpasses near Herning and older Danish wildlife overpasses are all too narrow to function as efficient fauna passages for a broad range of species. Furthermore, to mitigate the barrier effect of roads for mammals efficiently the distance between suitable fauna passages must be smaller than presently practiced in Denmark. Based on the results from the Danish and other European studies NERI recommends the following guidelines for new wildlife overpasses in Denmark:
Wildlife overpasses designed to meet the need for several species should have a minimum width of 50 m.
Smaller overpasses designed to meet the specific needs of single smaller species should have a minimum width of 20 m.
Wildlife overpasses for more species with different habitat use, e.g. mammals, reptiles, and amphibians, should have a minimum width of 80 m.
The openness index should be minimum 0.8. Preferably it should be larger than 1.0.
Combined use of overpasses as fauna and human passages is not recommended.

+ More

The National Environmental Research Institute has been closed. New national centre now in operation

The National Environmental Research Institute (NERI), Aarhus University, has been closed, and the research-based consultancy services to authorities on nature, environment and energy are now – as per 1 July 2011 – provided by the National Centre for Environment and Energy (NERI), Aarhus University.

The National Centre for Environment and Energy (NERI) is the portal for authorities, businesses, interest organisations and the public to the strong expertise of Aarhus University within nature, environment and energy.

Kurt Nielsen, vice-dean for knowledge exchange at the Faculty of Science and Technology, Aarhus University, is director of the National Centre for Environment and Energy (NERI).

The research departments of the closed National Environmental Research Institute are now affiliated to the Department of Bioscience and the Department of Environmental Science.

In the future, the National Centre for Environment and Energy (NERI) can in its research-based consulting and knowledge exchange benefit from the university’s comprehensive research expertise.

The National Centre for Environment and Energy maintains NERI as an integrated part of its name.

The Centre’s website is currently under construction at the address www.dmu.au.dk. For a transitional period the National Environmental Research Institute’s former website will be available via the Centre’s homepage.

Continuation of information

Using existing subscription lists, the National Centre for Environment and Energy (NERI) will continue to inform the media and other interested parties of new research reports and other current research topics under study at Aarhus University within the fields of nature, environment and energy.

 

 
 

Source: Danish Ministry of the Environment
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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