First Record of White Stork in a Birdstrike in South Africa Above 3,300 m AGL
Birdstrikes to aircrafts are increasing on an annual basis and pose significant aviation safety risks. Identification of the birds involved is key to developing mitigation strategies. Often the only information available to make identifications are feather and/or tissue samples. Relying on feathers...
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doaj-172c8359e05942dba4fd4ed63a47dcaf2020-11-25T02:46:57ZengUtah State UniversityHuman-Wildlife Interactions2155-38742155-38742019-05-0113110.26076/cxxw-2t94First Record of White Stork in a Birdstrike in South Africa Above 3,300 m AGLDesire Dalton0Marli De Bruyn1Monica Mwale2Kim Labuschagne3Melissa Hofmann4Albert Froneman5Hanneline A. Smit-Robinson6Antoinette Kotze7National Zoological Garden South Africa National Biodiversity InstituteSouth African National Biodiversity InstituteSouth African National Biodiversity InstituteSouth African National Biodiversity InstituteAirports Company South AfricaAlbert Froneman ConsultingBirdLife South AfricaSouth African National Biodiversity InstituteBirdstrikes to aircrafts are increasing on an annual basis and pose significant aviation safety risks. Identification of the birds involved is key to developing mitigation strategies. Often the only information available to make identifications are feather and/or tissue samples. Relying on feathers alone to identify the bird species requires special expertise and access to museum collections for specimen comparisons. In 2017, feathers and tissue samples were recovered from the engine cowling of an airplane that had just landed at the Oliver Reginald (O. R.) Tambo international airport in South Africa after striking a bird at 3,353 m. To confirm the bird species, we sequenced a region of cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) for the unknown sample and compared the results to the Barcode of Life Database (BOLD) and National Centre for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) GenBank databases. Comparisons to these databases indicated that the species involved in the birdstrike incident was a white stork (Ciconia ciconia; 99.6–100% similarity). This was the first known record of a white stork involved in a birdstrike in South Africa and is important because it provided evidence of a high-altitude birdstrike. Availability of publicly accessible DNA barcoding databases that include all potential bird species from various geographic regions is a valuable tool in species identification and can aid wildlife management strategies at airports to reduce the risks associated with birdstrikes. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol13/iss1/18mitochondrial dnabirdstrikesouth africawhite stork |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Desire Dalton Marli De Bruyn Monica Mwale Kim Labuschagne Melissa Hofmann Albert Froneman Hanneline A. Smit-Robinson Antoinette Kotze |
spellingShingle |
Desire Dalton Marli De Bruyn Monica Mwale Kim Labuschagne Melissa Hofmann Albert Froneman Hanneline A. Smit-Robinson Antoinette Kotze First Record of White Stork in a Birdstrike in South Africa Above 3,300 m AGL Human-Wildlife Interactions mitochondrial dna birdstrike south africa white stork |
author_facet |
Desire Dalton Marli De Bruyn Monica Mwale Kim Labuschagne Melissa Hofmann Albert Froneman Hanneline A. Smit-Robinson Antoinette Kotze |
author_sort |
Desire Dalton |
title |
First Record of White Stork in a Birdstrike in South Africa Above 3,300 m AGL |
title_short |
First Record of White Stork in a Birdstrike in South Africa Above 3,300 m AGL |
title_full |
First Record of White Stork in a Birdstrike in South Africa Above 3,300 m AGL |
title_fullStr |
First Record of White Stork in a Birdstrike in South Africa Above 3,300 m AGL |
title_full_unstemmed |
First Record of White Stork in a Birdstrike in South Africa Above 3,300 m AGL |
title_sort |
first record of white stork in a birdstrike in south africa above 3,300 m agl |
publisher |
Utah State University |
series |
Human-Wildlife Interactions |
issn |
2155-3874 2155-3874 |
publishDate |
2019-05-01 |
description |
Birdstrikes to aircrafts are increasing on an annual basis and pose significant aviation safety risks. Identification of the birds involved is key to developing mitigation strategies. Often the only information available to make identifications are feather and/or tissue samples. Relying on feathers alone to identify the bird species requires special expertise and access to museum collections for specimen comparisons. In 2017, feathers and tissue samples were recovered from the engine cowling of an airplane that had just landed at the Oliver Reginald (O. R.) Tambo international airport in South Africa after striking a bird at 3,353 m. To confirm the bird species, we sequenced a region of cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) for the unknown sample and compared the results to the Barcode of Life Database (BOLD) and National Centre for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) GenBank databases. Comparisons to these databases indicated that the species involved in the birdstrike incident was a white stork (Ciconia ciconia; 99.6–100% similarity). This was the first known record of a white stork involved in a birdstrike in South Africa and is important because it provided evidence of a high-altitude birdstrike. Availability of publicly accessible DNA barcoding databases that include all potential bird species from various geographic regions is a valuable tool in species identification and can aid wildlife management strategies at airports to reduce the risks associated with birdstrikes.
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topic |
mitochondrial dna birdstrike south africa white stork |
url |
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol13/iss1/18 |
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