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Posted: 2016-02-02T11:51:56Z | Updated: 2016-02-02T13:30:32Z Police Are Training Eagles To Take Out Rogue Drones | HuffPost Life

Police Are Training Eagles To Take Out Rogue Drones

"It's a low-tech solution to a high-tech problem."
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AMSTERDAM, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Dutch police puzzling over how to remove drones that pose a public safety threat are testing a way to get the job done in one fell swoop -- with trained eagles.

"It's a low-tech solution to a high-tech problem," spokesman Dennis Janus of the country's national police said.

The idea arose because amateur use of drones has boomed and police have begun to worry about unlicensed drones flying into off-limit spaces around airports or above public events such as politician's appearances.

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TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA via Getty Images
Police in Japan have also been using nets to snag rogue drones.

Possible solutions the Dutch police have studied include shooting nets at the offending drones, remotely hacking them to seize their controls -- or taking them out with birds of prey.

"People sometimes think it's a hoax, but it's proving very effective so far," Janus said. Showing off the technique in a video released by police, a four-propeller drone hovers in the middle of a warehouse, colored lights flashing.

Released by her keeper, a white-tailed eagle glides straight toward the drone, clutches it easily in her talons -- clack! -- and drags it to the ground.

Sjoerd Hoogendoorn of "Guard from Above," the company working with police to develop the concept, said the birds must be trained to recognize the drones as prey. They are rewarded with a piece of meat after each successful foray.

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Jeremy Woodhouse via Getty Images
White-tailed eagles' scaly talons are strong and tough enough to seize most consumer-grade drones without injury from the blades.

Their scaly talons are strong and tough enough to seize most consumer-grade drones without injury from the blades, he said.

"These birds are used to meeting resistance from animals they hunt in the wild, and they don't seem to have much trouble with the drones," he said.

The potential impact on the animals' welfare is subject of testing by an external scientific research institute. "The real problem we have is that they destroy a lot of drones," Hoogendoorn said. "It's a major cost of testing."

Another unknown is how the the birds will fare in a crowd situation, he said.

A decision by police on whether to move ahead with using the eagles is expected by the end of the year.

(Reporting by Toby Sterling; Editing by Tom Heneghan)

 

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