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Boo to the birds lost in translation
It's enough to ruffle the feathers of eminent linguists. Electronic audio players installed to scare birds off the runway at the Capital International Airport in Beijing have failed because they emit a foreign tongue.
But the birds are apparently unruffled by the foreign squawks because of a "language barrier." So staff have hastily recorded the sounds of Chinese hawks into the machine. However, they will have to wait a while because the non-plussed peckers are migratory and have departed after spending several secure weeks happily roosting and feeding on grass bordering the airstrip. "Birds do have their own ways of communicating and understand the sounds made by their natural enemies," said Zhang Zhengwang, biology professor and a bird expert from Beijing Normal University. Earlier this year, the airport installed scarecrows in the shape of birds of prey which sway in the wind. They had some success. And dozens of bird nests have been removed from the top of nearby lamp posts on the perimeter road. "Bird strikes can be very catastrophic. Though our airport has not experienced major bird-strike accidents that caused casualties, we are always vigilant," said Ma Ruzhuang, the press officer of Beijing airport. In 1997, after a minor bird-strike accident, Beijing airport set up a special team to find an effective way to scare away the birds. "No airport in the world has found a panacea to deal with the bird nuisance," Ma said. Birds are a serious menace to a aircraft during takeoff and landing. They can get sucked into the engines or collide with the fuselage and cause severe damage. BASH bird aircraft strike hazard is considered one of the most daunting challenges facing airports the world over. Nearly 200 people had been killed worldwide as a result of wildlife strikes since 1988, Bird Strike Committee USA an organization consisting of members from the aviation, agriculture and defence departments in the country. "The battles to scare the birds might be endless," said Ma. |
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