%0 Journal Article %T Bird mortality related to collisions with ski每lift cables: do we estimate just the tip of the iceberg? %A Bech %A N. %A Beltran %A S. %A Boissier %A J. %A Allienne %A J. F. %J Animal Biodiversity and Conservation %D 2012 %I The Natural Science Museum of Barcelona %X Collisions with ski每lift cables are an important cause of death for grouse species living close to alpine ski resorts. As several biases may reduce the detection probability of bird carcasses, the mortality rates related to these collisions are generally underestimated. The possibility that injured birds may continue flying for some distance after striking cables represents a major source of error, known as crippling bias. Estimating the crippling losses resulting from birds dying far from the ski每lift corridors is difficult and it is usually assessed by systematic searches of carcasses on both sides of the ski每lifts. Using molecular tracking, we were able to demonstrate that a rock ptarmigan hen flew up to 600 m after striking a ski每lift cable, a distance preventing its detection by traditional carcasses surveys. Given the difficulty in conducting systematic searches over large areas surrounding the ski每lifts, only an experiment using radio每tagged birds would allow us to estimate the real mortality rate associated with cable collision. %K Bird collision %K Crippling bias %K Forensic approach %K Human infrastructure %K Rock ptarmigan %K Ski每lift wires %U http://abc.museucienciesjournals.cat/files/ABC_35-1_pp_95-98.pdf