Animal crossings: the ecoducts helping wildlife navigate busy roads across
the world
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Intermediate
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Patrick Greenfield
29 December, 2021
From a tiny railway bridge for dormice in
the UK to new animal crossings for deer
and bears in Colorado, wildlife bridges are
becoming popular.
“Ten years ago, wildlife bridges were
experimental. We didn’t know whether they
would work or not. Now they’ve shown they
cause huge reductions in collisions – in some
cases, 85% to 99% reductions,” says Rob
Ament, a road ecology expert. “You can design
them for many species.”
Wildlife bridges are found on every continent:
there is an elephant underpass near Mount
Kenya; the Netherlands has a network of
bridges for wolves; suspended water pipes are
used in Java; and a bison bridge may help the
animals cross the Mississippi.
Here are five projects from around the world
helping animals make their way.
Alligator Alley, Florida
A 129km stretch of road bisects the
Everglades, an enormous wetland that is
home to thousands of alligators, deer and
the endangered Florida panther. It used to
be notorious for high-speed collisions with
wildlife until the crossings were installed.
Today, dozens of underpasses and fencing
help wildlife navigate the road. “Fencing is
critical along Alligator Alley. It keeps the wildlife
off the roadway and on the crossing,” says
Brent Setchell, a design engineer at Florida
Department of Transportation.
‘The tunnel of love’ on the Great Alpine
Road, Australia
In south-east Australia, the Great Alpine
Road was a threat to a colony of critically
endangered mountain pygmy possums. Even
though there are only about 150 in the colony,
testing revealed genetic differences between
sub-groups separated by the road. They are
also threatened by fire, disappearing food
sources and other species. Conservationists
decided to build a “tunnel of love” between
the isolated groups to improve mixing and
strengthen their chances of survival. The tiny
marsupials can cross the nearly 15-metre
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tunnel in just 15 seconds – sometimes too fast
for remote sensing cameras to capture them.
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