GLOBAL positioning tags have been fitted to amber-listed Lesser Black-backed Gulls on the Cumbria coast to see how they behave around offshore wind farms.

The British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) has partnered with DONG Energy to carry out a two year study of the species. State-of-the-art GPS tags will be used to track the movements of gulls from a colony at Cumbria Wildlife Trust’s South Walney Nature Reserve.

The tags, which sit between a bird’s wings like a backpack, will allow the BTO researchers to understand many different aspects of these birds’ lives around wind farms, including crucially, whether gulls are at risk of death through collision with turbine blades.

“While offshore wind farms are a key weapon in the fight against climate change, it is important to understand potential effects of their development on wildlife in order to minimise any negative impacts," said Emily Scragg for the BTO. "The tagging will enable the BTO to study the flight patterns of the gulls and offer an unprecedented chance to understand how seabirds respond to the construction of an offshore wind farm, as well as to further understand their movements through the year.”

Allen Risby, Lead Environmental and Consent Specialist with DONG Energy, said: "We are keen to learn more about how these gulls behave around offshore wind farms as they fly above, below or between the individual wind turbines. It will also be interesting to see how they interact with the wind farms."

The study is being jointly funded by the Walney Extension and Burbo Bank Extension projects, two of the offshore wind farms that DONG Energy is currently constructing off the northwest coast.

Tagging was undertaken this year during the gulls’ summer breeding season and the work thus far has already shown some differences in the use of offshore areas by birds from South Walney and Barrow.