Impacts of onshore wind energy production on biodiversity
Wind is increasingly used as a renewable source of energy worldwide. However, harvesting wind energy can have negative consequences for biodiversity. In this Review, we summarize the growth of onshore wind power, its impacts on species and ecosystems, and how those impacts are assessed and mitigated. Across the construction, operation and decommissioning stages, wind facilities are associated with wildlife fatality and behavioural change as well as alteration, loss and fragmentation of terrestrial and aerial habitat. These negative consequences can be mitigated by avoiding construction of wind turbines at sensitive sites, detecting and deterring wildlife, curtailing turbines to reduce fatalities, and replacing lost habitats. Uncertainty about wildlife populations and their demographic parameters, the rate and extent of build-out of onshore wind energy, and best practices for mitigation, as well as variability in regulatory requirements by country or region, all contribute to the difficulty of predicting the consequences of this technology for biodiversity. Scenario-based modelling that incorporates population- and community-level consequences to biodiversity from varying degrees of wind energy development — including the cumulative effects of multiple facilities — is key to addressing this uncertainty.
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2025 |
|---|---|
| Title | Impacts of onshore wind energy production on biodiversity |
| DOI | 10.1038/s44358-025-00078-1 |
| Authors | Todd E. Katzner, David M. Nelson, Ana Teresa Marques, Christian C. Voigt, Sergio A Lambertucci, Natalia Rebolo, Enrico Bernard, Robert H. Diehl, Megan Murgatroyd |
| Publication Type | Article |
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Series Title | Nature Biodiversity Reviews |
| Index ID | 70274105 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center |