Lodi News-Sentinel

Traffic cones are the key in Caltrans’ fight to evict bats

- By Tony Bizjak

Why did Caltrans bolt hundreds of upside-down traffic cones to the underside of the W-X freeway in downtown Sacramento? The answer is almost as odd as the sight of rows of orange cones clinging like bats to the belly of a concrete bridge.

In fact, the whole endeavor involves actual bats.

Thousands of bats and birds and even some owls reside in the crannies and crevices of the elevated freeway. Caltrans has decided to evict them so they won’t be in the way of a major upcoming Highway 50 widening project.

The traffic cones are the eviction notices.

Each cone covers one of the structure’s “weep holes,” the holes that allow moisture to drain out of the bridge deck during the rainy season. Those weep holes have been serving another, informal, purpose: Birds and bats use them as entrances to hideaways in the structure where the bats roost and the birds build nests.

Workers screwed a short plastic tube to the narrow end of each cone, then they duct-taped a short plastic sheath to the end of the tube. Bats and birds who are inside the structure can exit the bridge through the center of the cone, the tube and the plastic sheath. But they cannot get back in because the sheaths’ sides press back together, closing up.

“It’s an ingenious way that is inexpensiv­e, easy to make and install,” said Caltrans biologist Shawn Duffy, who is advising on the project.

Evicting the bats and birds means those species will not be around to nest or reproduce in the structure during the upcoming constructi­on period, Duffy said. “We don’t want them having their young while we are working on it. They might abandon their young, which we don’t want them to do.

“You try to approach it with the idea that you are going to prevent any harm to these creatures that are using the structure, with the idea they can come back and take up residency again” as soon as the project work finishes in each bridge section.

The “exclusion” cones are a relatively new trick for Caltrans, but were used locally last year during widening of Highway 65 in Placer County near Interstate 80, officials said.

The planned Highway 50 project will add carpool or high-occupancy vehicles lanes to Highway 50 from just east of Watt Avenue through the central city area to the interchang­e with Interstate 5. Crews also will build sound walls along the south side of the freeway from Stockton Boulevard to 65th Street. Other elements of the project include widened connector ramps, taller bridges at overcrossi­ngs for larger trucks, and new pavement.

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