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White stork conservation: first use of nest platforms on power poles in Iran

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2024

Mahmood Kolnegari*
Affiliation:
Iran's Birds and Power Lines Committee, Arak, Markazi Province, Iran University of Cordoba, Cordoba, Spain
Mohammad Ali Khosravi
Affiliation:
Lorestan Power Distribution Company, Borujerd, Lorestan Province, Iran
Ali Akbar Basiri
Affiliation:
Iran's Birds and Power Lines Committee, Arak, Markazi Province, Iran
Mandana Hazrati
Affiliation:
Iran's Birds and Power Lines Committee, Arak, Markazi Province, Iran
Jose Guerrero-Casado
Affiliation:
University of Cordoba, Cordoba, Spain
Francisco S. Tortosa
Affiliation:
University of Cordoba, Cordoba, Spain
Richard Harness
Affiliation:
EDM International, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA

Abstract

Type
Conservation News
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC BY 4.0.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Fauna & Flora International

Overhead power lines are a global threat to birds. Because of its large body and tendency to nest on power pylons, the white stork Ciconia ciconia is highly susceptible to collision with power lines and electrocution. One of the main breeding habitats of this bird in central Iran is around the Bishe-Dalan Wetland, in Kapar-Joudaki village, Lorestan Province, where 33 pairs breed on low- and medium-voltage power distribution lines (220 V and 20 kV, respectively).

In 2020, Iran's Birds and Power Lines Committee received five reports of white stork electrocutions. We discovered that 20 kV power lines in the region were equipped with electrical components hazardous to birds such as pin-type insulators, fused cutouts and pole-mounted transformers, and nests on power poles were susceptible to being blown off in strong winds. We contacted the provincial energy utility company and recommended actions to prevent electrocutions and save nests. At the same time, we held two workshops for local residents, utility company personnel and a provincial environment agency, to raise public awareness and to discuss mitigation measures.

White stork Ciconia ciconia conservation project in central Iran: (a) reconfiguration of 20 kV medium-voltage power line (the arrow shows the original crossarm), (b) installation of first nest platform on 220 V low-voltage power pole, and (c) occupation of nest platform. Photos: Mahmood Kolnegari.

In the first phase of the mitigation project, in 2021, a medium-voltage line was reconfigured to make it bird-friendly. The utility company removed 75 pin-type insulators and installed the same number of suspended insulators on new crossarms suspended below the original arms. The original crossarms were left to provide nesting support. An energy pole with a fused cutout and transformer was relocated outside the stork's preferred habitat.

We then constructed a 60 × 60 cm metal nesting platform and donated it to the utility company. It was installed in late autumn 2021 and a pair of storks used the platform in spring 2022, the first powerline-mounted nest platform occupied by white storks in Iran. This success motivated local people who had taken part in the workshops. They constructed 23 nest platforms, and these were installed on a low-voltage power line by the utility company. All the platforms were used by breeding pairs in spring–summer 2023. In 2 years of monitoring there have been no electrocutions and no nests have been blown off the new platforms.