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Meteorological Data Policies Needed to Support Biodiversity Monitoring with Weather Radar

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posted on 2025-08-01, 15:02 authored by J Shamoun-Baranes, S Bauer, JW Chapman, P Desmet, AM Dokter, A Farnsworth, H van Gasteren, B Haest, J Koistinen, B Kranstauber, F Liechti, T H. E. Mason, C Nilsson, R Nussbaumer, B Schmid, N Weisshaupt, H Leijnse
Weather radar networks have great potential for continuous and long-term monitoring of aerial biodiversity of birds, bats, and insects. Biological data from weather radars can support ecological research, inform conservation policy development and implementation, and increase the public’s interest in natural phenomena such as migration. Weather radars are already used to study animal migration, quantify changes in populations, and reduce aerial conflicts between birds and aircraft. Yet efforts to establish a framework for the broad utilization of operational weather radar for biodiversity monitoring are at risk without suitable data policies and infrastructure in place. In Europe, communities of meteorologists and ecologists have made joint efforts toward sharing and standardizing continent-wide weather radar data. These efforts are now at risk as new meteorological data exchange policies render data useless for biodiversity monitoring. In several other parts of the world, weather radar data are not even available for ecological research. We urge policy makers, funding agencies, and meteorological organizations across the world to recognize the full potential of weather radar data. We propose several actions that would ensure the continued capability of weather radar networks worldwide to act as powerful tools for biodiversity monitoring and research.

Funding

101003553

326315

844360

Academy of Finland

BR/185/A1/GloBAM-BE

Belgian Federal Science Policy Office

E10008

European Union Horizon 2020

Leon Levy Foundation

Lyda Hill Philanthropies

NSF 1927743

NSF 2017817

National Science Foundation (NSF)

Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)

SNF 31BD30_184120

Swiss National Science Foundation

USGS

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© 2022 American Meteorological Society

Notes

This is the final version. Available from the American Meteorological Society via the DOI in this record Data availability statement. Data used to create Fig. 3 are freely available through the KNMI Data Platform (https://dataplatform.knmi.nl).

Journal

Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

Pagination

e1234-e1242

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2022-07-26T13:26:14Z

FOA date

2022-10-26T23:00:00Z

Citation

Vol. 103(4), pp. e1234-e1242

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