Age bias in the bag of pink-footed geese : influence of flocking behaviour on vulnerability

International audience In pink-footed goose () wintering in Denmark, The Netherlands and Belgium, the proportion of juveniles in the hunting bag is consistently higher than that observed in the autumn population. Such juvenile bias in the bag is usually ascribed to young geese lacking experience wit...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European Journal of Wildlife Research
Main Author: Madsen, Jesper
Other Authors: Department of Arctic Environment Rockilde, Aarhus University Aarhus -National Environmental Research Institute Danmark (NERI)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2009
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Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-00548161
https://hal.science/hal-00548161/document
https://hal.science/hal-00548161/file/10344_2009_349_ReferencePDF.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10344-009-0349-1
Description
Summary:International audience In pink-footed goose () wintering in Denmark, The Netherlands and Belgium, the proportion of juveniles in the hunting bag is consistently higher than that observed in the autumn population. Such juvenile bias in the bag is usually ascribed to young geese lacking experience with hunting or disruption of juveniles from families. An alternative explanation may be that flocking behaviour of families make juveniles more vulnerable. Observations of morning flights of pink-footed geese to the feeding grounds from two of the major autumn-staging areas showed that geese were distributed in many small flocks (median flock size = 9). This was not significantly different from the flock size distribution shot at by hunters (median = 8), suggesting that hunters targeted goose flock size in proportion to the general probability of encounter. The rate at which hunters downed geese was independent of flock size. The ratio between juveniles and adults in flocks decreased with flock size and flocks of <60 individuals primarily comprised family groups. The likelihood of being shot at was 2.4 times higher for juveniles and 3.4 times higher for older birds in small flocks (<10 individuals) compared to larger flocks. The observations suggest that both juveniles as well as successful adult breeding birds were more vulnerable than non-breeding/failed breeding birds as a result of flocking behaviour.