Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin

Increased populations of resident Canada geese create major crop loss problems for farmers, especially in areas that become traditional sites for brood-rearing. Such sites concentrate geese and goslings in locations where food is abundant and flightless adults and young find escape safety on adjacen...

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Published in:Proceedings of the Vertebrate Pest Conference
Main Author: Whitford, Philip C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1426f4n2
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spelling ftcdlib:qt1426f4n2 2023-05-15T15:46:23+02:00 Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin Whitford, Philip C. 74 - 79 2008-01-01 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1426f4n2 english eng eScholarship, University of California qt1426f4n2 http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1426f4n2 public Whitford, Philip C.(2008). Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin. Proceedings of the Vertebrate Pest Conference, 23(23), 74 - 79. doi:10.5070/V423110656. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1426f4n2 alarm call playback biosonics bird damage Branta canadensis Canada goose crop damage reduction hazing Life Sciences article 2008 ftcdlib https://doi.org/10.5070/V423110656 2019-04-05T22:52:18Z Increased populations of resident Canada geese create major crop loss problems for farmers, especially in areas that become traditional sites for brood-rearing. Such sites concentrate geese and goslings in locations where food is abundant and flightless adults and young find escape safety on adjacent lakes or rivers. Emerging corn, winter wheat, and soybeans are favorite foods, and these sustain extensive crop damage when near water and brood-rearing sites. From 16 May to 28 August 2007, alarm and alert call playbacks from GooseBuster call units were used with and without other scare reinforcement to assess efficacy of different methods at reducing crop damage at multiple sites near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin. Test sites were recommended by USDA APHIS Wildlife Services personnel as being sites with heaviest early summer crop damage reported in prior years. Criteria for success were based upon geese/hours/month or geese/hours/week of field use before and after treatment, using frequent counts of geese on properties, weekly farmer interviews, and dropping counts in fields to estimate number and number of hours geese were present. Crop damage assessment by USDA compared current year to prior years’ assessment, or used visible signs of damage and extent. On-demand use of call units, coupled with firing screamer and banger shells, was found to be the most effective method for inducing long-term crop avoidance. Crop damage reduction was very successful, ranging from a 94.3% reduction at one site (17 bushels lost in 2007 versus 297 bushels in 2006), to several fields declared to have “no significant goose damage in 2007” by USDA crop evaluation personnel. Goose hours/month on the largest field data collection decreased from >36,000 to <200 geese/hour/month, a 99.45% reduction. No sign of habituation to reinforced “on-demand” alarm call use was found over the course of the 100 days of the study. Article in Journal/Newspaper Branta canadensis Canada Goose University of California: eScholarship Canada Proceedings of the Vertebrate Pest Conference 23
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic alarm call playback
biosonics
bird damage
Branta canadensis
Canada goose
crop damage reduction
hazing
Life Sciences
spellingShingle alarm call playback
biosonics
bird damage
Branta canadensis
Canada goose
crop damage reduction
hazing
Life Sciences
Whitford, Philip C.
Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin
topic_facet alarm call playback
biosonics
bird damage
Branta canadensis
Canada goose
crop damage reduction
hazing
Life Sciences
description Increased populations of resident Canada geese create major crop loss problems for farmers, especially in areas that become traditional sites for brood-rearing. Such sites concentrate geese and goslings in locations where food is abundant and flightless adults and young find escape safety on adjacent lakes or rivers. Emerging corn, winter wheat, and soybeans are favorite foods, and these sustain extensive crop damage when near water and brood-rearing sites. From 16 May to 28 August 2007, alarm and alert call playbacks from GooseBuster call units were used with and without other scare reinforcement to assess efficacy of different methods at reducing crop damage at multiple sites near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin. Test sites were recommended by USDA APHIS Wildlife Services personnel as being sites with heaviest early summer crop damage reported in prior years. Criteria for success were based upon geese/hours/month or geese/hours/week of field use before and after treatment, using frequent counts of geese on properties, weekly farmer interviews, and dropping counts in fields to estimate number and number of hours geese were present. Crop damage assessment by USDA compared current year to prior years’ assessment, or used visible signs of damage and extent. On-demand use of call units, coupled with firing screamer and banger shells, was found to be the most effective method for inducing long-term crop avoidance. Crop damage reduction was very successful, ranging from a 94.3% reduction at one site (17 bushels lost in 2007 versus 297 bushels in 2006), to several fields declared to have “no significant goose damage in 2007” by USDA crop evaluation personnel. Goose hours/month on the largest field data collection decreased from >36,000 to <200 geese/hour/month, a 99.45% reduction. No sign of habituation to reinforced “on-demand” alarm call use was found over the course of the 100 days of the study.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Whitford, Philip C.
author_facet Whitford, Philip C.
author_sort Whitford, Philip C.
title Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin
title_short Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin
title_full Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin
title_fullStr Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin
title_full_unstemmed Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin
title_sort successful use of alarm and alert calls to reduce emerging crop damage by resident canada geese near horicon marsh, wisconsin
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2008
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1426f4n2
op_coverage 74 - 79
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Branta canadensis
Canada Goose
genre_facet Branta canadensis
Canada Goose
op_source Whitford, Philip C.(2008). Successful Use of Alarm and Alert Calls to Reduce Emerging Crop Damage by Resident Canada Geese near Horicon Marsh, Wisconsin. Proceedings of the Vertebrate Pest Conference, 23(23), 74 - 79. doi:10.5070/V423110656. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1426f4n2
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op_rights public
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5070/V423110656
container_title Proceedings of the Vertebrate Pest Conference
container_volume 23
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