
As the device is only triggered by oncoming headlights, it will not interfere with the passage of wildlife when no vehicles are nearby. Its audio alarm mimics the call of a predator or a deer’s cry of fear, while the lights are meant to resemble the moving reflective irises of a predator’s eyes. So animals won’t become desensitized to it, the DeerDeter can be programmed with a variety of sounds, including a high-frequency noise audible to deer but not to humans – this is for use in urban areas, where people might find its nocturnal screeches off-putting.
The device is encased in a weatherproof Plexiglas housing, and runs off batteries, solar cells, or both.
The Utah pilot project is a joint venture between U.S. distributor JAFA Technologies and Austrian product developer IPTE. UDOT bought 70 of the devices at a reduced price, and the companies threw in an extra 30 to ensure verifiable test results. Not only will UDOT be evaluating how implementation of the DeerDeter affects the carcass count, but they will also be setting up Infrared motion-activated cameras, to observe how the animals react when the alarms go off.
The DeerDeter has already been successfully tested in “an exceptionally hazardous area” in Springfield Township, New Jersey, and has been deployed by the Highway Authority in Denver, Colorado and Essex County, New Jersey. The current test area is a 1.5-mile section of Utah’s Highway 191, which lies within a wildlife corridor. In Austria, where 4,000 of the devices are already in use, they have reportedly reduced deer-vehicle collisions by 75 to 100 percent.