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Effects of Natural Gas Drilling on Wildlife Dr. Jerry Skinner Keystone College Who…"speaks for the trees, as the trees have no tongues“? What are the impacts? It depends…… – Land use-farmland of forest? What are the impacts? It depends…… – land use-farmland of forest? – core forest is of special concern • >300 ft from edge or opening – number of wells and their placement • depends on geology, proximity to pipelines and water, and size of the gas drainage unit The bottom line…the landscape will change. Pad Site • often 4-6 acres • stabilized with compacted stone and aggregate • created ponds • roads and pipeline connections Linear Openings: Roads, Seismic Lines, and Pipelines • some wildlife avoid roads-even deer • forest-dependent salamanders are impacted by both active and inactive roads • encourage trespass by ATVs • seismic lines 8 m wide became territorial boundaries • lines 2-3 m wide were incorporated into territories Linear Openings: Roads, Seismic Lines, and Pipelines – highways for invasive species: • • • • Multiflora rose Stiltgrass Autumn olive Garlic mustard Invasives: Garlic Mustard • Allelopathic • Aggressive Japanese Knotweed/Bamboo Japanese Barberry Autumn Olive Mile-a-Minute Impoundments • freshwater reservoirs • frac waters • trap for amphibians • attractor for migratory waterfowl Noise • Drilling is temporary • Compressors stations are permanent • Birds and amphibians communicate vocally during breeding season – along highways, birds wait until big trucks have passed to sing – low frequency sounds travel farther – songbird diversity is 1.5x higher away from noise (Baynbe, Habib, and Boutin 2008) Ovenbirds had lower pairing success by compressors; younger males occupied sites nearer to compressor stations. (Habib, Bayne, and Boutin 2007) Habitat Fragmentation Species Area Curve: Bats on Caribbean Islands Log of cumulative # of species Log of island size in square miles Conclusion: Larger islands patches have more species. Allegheny National Forest Roads and Wildlife • Forest dependent salamanders negatively impacted by both active and inactive logging roads (Semiltisch et al. 2007) • Road traffic and location influence mortality rates (Langen et al. 2009, Eigenbrod et al. 2008) • 40-60% reduction in density of sage-brush songbirds within 100 m of roads associated with natural gas extraction (Ingelfinger and Anderson 2004) Disturbance to Sensitive Habitats When the ‘edge’ increases… • the core “deep dark woods” decreases • higher predation and nest parasitism Increased Predation Brown-headed Cowbird The Winners: habitat generalists, tolerant of distubance and people American Crow, Common Raven, Blue Jay The Losers: intolerant of disturbance or habitat specialists Northern Goshawk, Broad-winged Hawk Poor Dispesral Abilities Spotted Salamander, Northern Red Salamander, Wood Frog Area sensitive or forest interior birds Scarlet Tanager, Blue-headed Vireo Allegheny Woodrat, Timber Rattlesnake Timber Rattlesnake • PA candidate species – species of immediate concern • responsibility species-may have 5% of total world breeding population; PA is the NE US stronghold • strong correlation to Marcellus shale distribution • seismic testing can collapse dens Impacts to Plants & Communities • Pads – Direct mortality & loss of ecological community – Fragmentation (more on this later) – Invasive-on equipment or natural dispersal – Won’t be restored to original community • Related Activities – – – – – Seismic survey Access roads Impoundment Water use and disposal Pipelines Is there legal protection? Pennsylvania Natural Diversity Inventory (PNDI) Possible Outcomes of PNDI “Hits” • No impact • Recommend moving the site • Other mitigations • Extensive survey for species of special concern (endangered, threatened, etc.) • Monitor impacts PNDI Species of Interest Northern Myotis Silver-haired Bat Indiana Bat Eastern Small-footed Myotis PNDI: Grassland Birds -avoid activity during nesting season Upland Sandpiper Short-eared Owl Northern Harrier/Marsh Hawk Bald Eagle • >200 nests in PA • Keep well 1000 feet away • Nests off-limits for 3 years Great Blue Heronry • 0-600 feet-no activity that alters habitat • 600-1000 feet-low impact activity • Nesting seasonFeb 15-Aug 15 Minimizing Impact • Buffers around important features • Encourage sanitization of equipment • Encourage placement of sites, roads, etc. by existing disturbances • Monitor invasives pre/during/post • Hand cut seismic routes Reclamation of Disturbed Sites • Revegetation guidelines • Encourage use of native species • Require monitoring of aggressive nonnatives • Lessen potential of invasives-plant a cover quickly State Gamelands and Forests • In many cases the State does NOT own mineral rights • Owners may exercise their right of removal but still must follow environmental laws • PA laws favor the extractor over the landowner. And what of the aquatic species? Change is coming… Change is here already… What level is acceptable?