One Ohio airport is now experimenting with a new, gentler way to avoid bird strikes: planting tall prairie grass.
Heavy birds like geese which cause the most damage to planes are believed to avoid long grasses because they fear predators might be hiding within.
So officials at Dayton International Airport are converting up to 300 acres of the airfield's 2,200 non-aeronautical acres into prairie grass. The goal is, by the end of this year, to plant the tall grass under the takeoff and landing paths.
But some cause catastrophic damage. The forced landing of US Airways Flight 1549 in the Hudson River in 2009 often called The Miracle on the Hudson occurred after Canadian geese were ingested in both engines, causing the plane to lose power. Nobody died when the plane glided into the river.
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The passengers of Eastern Air Lines Flight 375 in 1960 weren't so lucky. The plane struck a flock of European starlings during takeoff. All four engines were damaged and the aircraft crashed in Boston harbor; 62 people died.
A little more than half of bird strikes occur from July to October, which is when young birds leave nests and fall migration occurs.
Between 2001 and 2013, there were 218 wildlife strikes at Dayton. The majority involved doves, pigeons, sparrows and other small birds that didn't cause severe damage. The airport sees 56 commercial planes landing and taking off each day. Two-thirds of those are smaller regional jets.
"We operate airports in a smaller and smaller environment," says Terrence G Slaybaugh, director of Dayton's airport. "If we are going to protect the long term use of airports in an increasingly populated area we need to be less intrusive and find ways to contribute in a positive way to our surroundings.