加州的光伏太阳能农场:我们能同时拥有可再生电力和我们的物种吗?

IF 1 4区 生物学 Q3 FISHERIES California Fish and Wildlife Journal Pub Date : 2021-11-02 DOI:10.51492/cfwj.hwisi.6
B. Cypher, B. Boroski, R. Burton, D. Meade, Scott E. Phillips, P. Leitner, Erica C. Kelly, Tory L. Westall, Jason Dart
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引用次数: 1

摘要

光伏太阳能发电设施在加利福尼亚州和其他地方迅速普及。尽管这一趋势受到欢迎的原因有很多(例如,减少温室气体排放),但这些设施也可能对环境产生深远影响,尤其是对当地物种种群。当受保护的物种受到影响时,这些影响会变得更加显著。在加利福尼亚州中部的圣华金沙漠地区,太阳能设施已常规实施了一系列保护措施,这些措施有助于一些受保护物种继续使用这些设施。一些更重要的措施包括可渗透的安全围栏、植被管理、活动走廊、避开巢穴和洞穴等关键特征以及车辆限速。利用圣华金沙漠的太阳能设施对圣华金狐(Vulpes macrotis mutica)进行了详细研究。使用该设施的狐狸和附近参考地点的狐狸的种群和生态特征相似,太阳地点的狐狸值在核心种群区域内报告的狐狸值范围内。在保护措施的推动下,基特狐正在圣华金沙漠使用至少六个设施,其他各种受保护物种也是如此。这一成功的模式也有可能适用于其他生态系统,并应用于圣华金沙漠以外地区的设施,如莫哈韦沙漠。确定其他地区的物种是否可以使用光伏太阳能设施,并确定最有效的保护措施需要时间和测试,而这些努力将受益于土地所有者、太阳能开发商、自然资源机构、研究人员和其他人之间的合作。圣华金沙漠设施和莫哈韦沙漠最近的一个示范设施提供了强有力的证据,证明太阳能设施的建设和运营方式也可以适应一些受保护物种对这些设施的持续使用。
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Photovoltaic solar farms in California: can we have renewable electricity and our species, too?
Photovoltaic solar power generating facilities are proliferating rapidly in California and elsewhere. While this trend is welcomed for many reasons (e.g., reducing greenhouse gas emissions), these facilities also can have profound environmental impacts, particularly to local species populations. These impacts become more significant when species of conservation concern are affected. In the San Joaquin Desert region in central California, a number of conservation measures have been routinely implemented on solar facilities, and these measures have facilitated continued use of the facilities by a number of species of conservation concern. Some of the more significant measures include permeable security fences, vegetation management, movement corridors, avoiding critical features such as dens and burrows, and vehicle speed limits. Detailed studies have been conducted on San Joaquin kit foxes (Vulpes macrotis mutica) using solar facilities in the San Joaquin Desert. Demographic and ecological attributes of foxes are similar between foxes using the facilities and foxes on nearby reference sites, and values for foxes on solar sites are within the ranges of values for foxes reported from sites within core population areas. Facilitated by the conservation measures, kit foxes are using at least six facilities in the San Joaquin Desert as are a variety of other species of conservation concern. This successful model also potentially could be adapted to other ecosystems and applied to facilities in regions outside of the San Joaquin Desert, such as the Mojave Desert. Determining whether species in other regions can use photovoltaic solar facilities and identifying the most efficacious conservation measures will require time and testing, and these efforts would benefit from collaborative efforts among landowners, solar developers, natural resources agencies, researchers, and others. The San Joaquin Desert facilities and a recent demonstration facility in the Mojave Desert provide strong evidence that solar facilities can be constructed and operated in a manner that also accommodates continued use of the facilities by some species of conservation concern.
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