NTL Record

Title Non-Wildlife-Attracting Native and Naturalized Turf Species Suitable for Use on Airfields Managed for Wildlife Hazards in the Northeast
Record ID 44823
Personal Name
Creator
Vogler, Donna; Baricuska, Kristin Dorsch
Corporate Creator State University of New York, College at Oneonta. Biology Department
Corporate
Contributor
United States. Department of Transportation. Federal Aviation Administration. Office of Aviation Research
Publisher State University of New York. College at Oneonta. Biology Department.
Publication Date 20120204
Language English
Abstract Birds and other wildlife strikes cost the U.S. civil aviation industry over $620 million per year (Dolbeer & Wright 2008). Airfield wildlife place human life in jeopardy during take-offs and landings. Wildlife hazards may be especially problematic for General Aviation airports in farm friendly regions. Habitat Management for an integrated approach. The use of native plants on airfields has advantages: adapted to local conditions, low nutrient soils, not as likely to become invasive, and low maintenance requirements (less water, nutrients). This project examined the suitability for native plants to be hydroseeded on airfields compared to seed mixes already commonly used which contain species attractive to wildlife and was supported by FAA Aviation Research Grant, SUNY Oneonta, and 3 rural airports in NY: Oneonta Municipal Airport, Griffiss International Airport, and Elmira-Corning Regional Airport.
Rosap ID dot:36489
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/36489
TRT Terms Wildlife; Native plants; Airports; Turf; Airport runways
General Subjects Research Hub; Airfields; Aviation; Terminals and Facilities; Environment; Finger Lakes Conference
Geographical
Coverage
New England; United States
Contract Number 09-G-006; 2009-G-006
Resource type Presentations
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/44000/44800/44823/dot_36489_DS1_20180817.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository