Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::A case study

Impact scoring for established non-native birds in Europe has shown Canada goose (Branta canadensis) to have the highest environmental, economic (agricultural damage) and social impact. Among the ecological effects are overgrazing, fouling, trampling of vegetation such as reed beds and meadows, biot...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Adriaens, Tim, Huysentruyt, Frank, Devisscher, Sander, Devos, Koen, Casaer, Jim
Other Authors: Boets, Pieter
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://data.inbo.be/pureportal/en/publications/integrated-management-of-invasive-geese-populations-in-an-international-context(2bff7be5-4032-489a-814b-6d44b2bd6a5a).html
https://data.inbo.be/purews/files/6449396/Adriaens_etal_2014_In_Boets.pdf
id ftonapublicatio:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/2bff7be5-4032-489a-814b-6d44b2bd6a5a
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Institute Nature and Forest: Research outputs
op_collection_id ftonapublicatio
language English
topic /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00131
Nature management
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00137
Fauna management
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00149
Invasive species (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00143
Damage management (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00025
Fauna
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00104
Hunting (society)
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/eendvogels_anseriformes_
waterfowl (Anseriformes)
Canada goose
Canadese gans
grauwe gans
greylag goose
brandgans
barnacle goose
nijlgans
Egyptian goose
boerengans
feral goose
/dk/atira/pure/policy/biodiversiteitsbeleid
biodiversity policy
/dk/atira/pure/policy/soortgericht_natuurbeheer
species directed nature management
/dk/atira/pure/policy/natuurbeheer
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/vlaanderen
Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/nederland
Netherlands
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/west_vlaanderen
West Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/oost_vlaanderen
East Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/zeeland
Zeeland
spellingShingle /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00131
Nature management
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00137
Fauna management
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00149
Invasive species (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00143
Damage management (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00025
Fauna
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00104
Hunting (society)
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/eendvogels_anseriformes_
waterfowl (Anseriformes)
Canada goose
Canadese gans
grauwe gans
greylag goose
brandgans
barnacle goose
nijlgans
Egyptian goose
boerengans
feral goose
/dk/atira/pure/policy/biodiversiteitsbeleid
biodiversity policy
/dk/atira/pure/policy/soortgericht_natuurbeheer
species directed nature management
/dk/atira/pure/policy/natuurbeheer
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/vlaanderen
Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/nederland
Netherlands
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/west_vlaanderen
West Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/oost_vlaanderen
East Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/zeeland
Zeeland
Adriaens, Tim
Huysentruyt, Frank
Devisscher, Sander
Devos, Koen
Casaer, Jim
Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::A case study
topic_facet /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00131
Nature management
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00137
Fauna management
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00149
Invasive species (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00143
Damage management (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00025
Fauna
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00104
Hunting (society)
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/eendvogels_anseriformes_
waterfowl (Anseriformes)
Canada goose
Canadese gans
grauwe gans
greylag goose
brandgans
barnacle goose
nijlgans
Egyptian goose
boerengans
feral goose
/dk/atira/pure/policy/biodiversiteitsbeleid
biodiversity policy
/dk/atira/pure/policy/soortgericht_natuurbeheer
species directed nature management
/dk/atira/pure/policy/natuurbeheer
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/vlaanderen
Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/nederland
Netherlands
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/west_vlaanderen
West Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/oost_vlaanderen
East Flanders
/dk/atira/pure/geographic/zeeland
Zeeland
description Impact scoring for established non-native birds in Europe has shown Canada goose (Branta canadensis) to have the highest environmental, economic (agricultural damage) and social impact. Among the ecological effects are overgrazing, fouling, trampling of vegetation such as reed beds and meadows, bioturbiation of oligitrophic fens and pathogen transmission. Management of invasive geese in the region (western Flanders, eastern Flanders, Zeeuws-Vlaanderen) was, until recently, mainly done by egg pricking and hunting. Within the framework of the EU co-funded Interreg projects Invexo and RINSE, the coordination of egg pricking and hunting was enhanced and additional moult captures (n=131) were performed on a larger cross-border scale. Moult captures were very successful for Canada geese, with a total of 7829 caught between 2010 and 2013. Greylag geese (Anser anser), although comparable in density, tended to move away from catching sites during the moulting season. In relation to density, catch success for feral goose (Anser anser f. domestica) was high. Barnacle geese (Branta leucopsis) moult later and were therefore only caught in very low numbers. The reported numbers of Canada geese culled by hunters also increased in the same period with over 7000 birds shot per season. The overall impact of the combined management efforts was assessed by annual simultaneous counts of the geese populations in the region using a fixed sample of counting areas. Trends in the average number of geese per municipality and per year were modelled using gee-GLMs. This showed a significant decrease in the number of Canada and feral goose since the beginning of the project. In east-Flanders, where moult captures were applied most intensively, a significant yearly decrease was noted. Here, the modelled decline was in line with the trend in the absolute numbers of Canada geese which showed a 40 % reduction since 2010. For the species caught in high numbers, the impact was significant over four years, and related to catch effort. Although this approach suggests a link between moult captures and population numbers it also assumes other management efforts to be evenly applied over the project area, which was not the case. When analysed on a larger geographical scale, the number of geese in the entire area hardly decreased in the last year. Recent research indicates that Canada geese disperse over large distances within Europe, blurring effects of a local action over the years. Goose captures were performed within the EU co-funded Interreg Invexo (www.invexo.eu) (2010-2012) and the Interreg 2Seas project RINSE (www.rinse-europe.eu) (2012-2014), which seeks to improve awareness of the threats posed by INNS, and the methods to address them. Future work will be to upscale management and implement adaptive management backed by population models and thorough monitoring. This requires continued investment in prevention, awareness raising and generating public support. At short term, if the result of these actions is to be maintained after the Interreg project RINSE finishes, there is an urgent need for institutional coordination, formalised cooperation between stakeholders and structural funding of this initiative.
author2 Boets, Pieter
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author Adriaens, Tim
Huysentruyt, Frank
Devisscher, Sander
Devos, Koen
Casaer, Jim
author_facet Adriaens, Tim
Huysentruyt, Frank
Devisscher, Sander
Devos, Koen
Casaer, Jim
author_sort Adriaens, Tim
title Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::A case study
title_short Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::A case study
title_full Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::A case study
title_fullStr Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::A case study
title_full_unstemmed Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::A case study
title_sort integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::a case study
publishDate 2014
url https://data.inbo.be/pureportal/en/publications/integrated-management-of-invasive-geese-populations-in-an-international-context(2bff7be5-4032-489a-814b-6d44b2bd6a5a).html
https://data.inbo.be/purews/files/6449396/Adriaens_etal_2014_In_Boets.pdf
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Barnacle goose
Branta canadensis
Branta leucopsis
Canada Goose
genre_facet Barnacle goose
Branta canadensis
Branta leucopsis
Canada Goose
op_source Adriaens , T , Huysentruyt , F , Devisscher , S , Devos , K & Casaer , J 2014 , ' Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context: : A case study ' . in P Boets (ed.) , Science for the new regulation Abstractbook : BENELUX Conference on invasive species . pp. 54 .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
_version_ 1766371099916894208
spelling ftonapublicatio:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/2bff7be5-4032-489a-814b-6d44b2bd6a5a 2023-05-15T15:39:25+02:00 Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context::A case study Geïntegreerd beheer van invasieve ganzen in een internationale context:een case studie in België & Nederland Adriaens, Tim Huysentruyt, Frank Devisscher, Sander Devos, Koen Casaer, Jim Boets, Pieter 2014-04-02 application/pdf https://data.inbo.be/pureportal/en/publications/integrated-management-of-invasive-geese-populations-in-an-international-context(2bff7be5-4032-489a-814b-6d44b2bd6a5a).html https://data.inbo.be/purews/files/6449396/Adriaens_etal_2014_In_Boets.pdf eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Adriaens , T , Huysentruyt , F , Devisscher , S , Devos , K & Casaer , J 2014 , ' Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context: : A case study ' . in P Boets (ed.) , Science for the new regulation Abstractbook : BENELUX Conference on invasive species . pp. 54 . /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00131 Nature management /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00137 Fauna management /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00149 Invasive species (management) /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00143 Damage management (management) /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00025 Fauna /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00104 Hunting (society) /dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/eendvogels_anseriformes_ waterfowl (Anseriformes) Canada goose Canadese gans grauwe gans greylag goose brandgans barnacle goose nijlgans Egyptian goose boerengans feral goose /dk/atira/pure/policy/biodiversiteitsbeleid biodiversity policy /dk/atira/pure/policy/soortgericht_natuurbeheer species directed nature management /dk/atira/pure/policy/natuurbeheer /dk/atira/pure/geographic/vlaanderen Flanders /dk/atira/pure/geographic/nederland Netherlands /dk/atira/pure/geographic/west_vlaanderen West Flanders /dk/atira/pure/geographic/oost_vlaanderen East Flanders /dk/atira/pure/geographic/zeeland Zeeland contributionToPeriodical 2014 ftonapublicatio 2016-04-04T12:56:52Z Impact scoring for established non-native birds in Europe has shown Canada goose (Branta canadensis) to have the highest environmental, economic (agricultural damage) and social impact. Among the ecological effects are overgrazing, fouling, trampling of vegetation such as reed beds and meadows, bioturbiation of oligitrophic fens and pathogen transmission. Management of invasive geese in the region (western Flanders, eastern Flanders, Zeeuws-Vlaanderen) was, until recently, mainly done by egg pricking and hunting. Within the framework of the EU co-funded Interreg projects Invexo and RINSE, the coordination of egg pricking and hunting was enhanced and additional moult captures (n=131) were performed on a larger cross-border scale. Moult captures were very successful for Canada geese, with a total of 7829 caught between 2010 and 2013. Greylag geese (Anser anser), although comparable in density, tended to move away from catching sites during the moulting season. In relation to density, catch success for feral goose (Anser anser f. domestica) was high. Barnacle geese (Branta leucopsis) moult later and were therefore only caught in very low numbers. The reported numbers of Canada geese culled by hunters also increased in the same period with over 7000 birds shot per season. The overall impact of the combined management efforts was assessed by annual simultaneous counts of the geese populations in the region using a fixed sample of counting areas. Trends in the average number of geese per municipality and per year were modelled using gee-GLMs. This showed a significant decrease in the number of Canada and feral goose since the beginning of the project. In east-Flanders, where moult captures were applied most intensively, a significant yearly decrease was noted. Here, the modelled decline was in line with the trend in the absolute numbers of Canada geese which showed a 40 % reduction since 2010. For the species caught in high numbers, the impact was significant over four years, and related to catch effort. Although this approach suggests a link between moult captures and population numbers it also assumes other management efforts to be evenly applied over the project area, which was not the case. When analysed on a larger geographical scale, the number of geese in the entire area hardly decreased in the last year. Recent research indicates that Canada geese disperse over large distances within Europe, blurring effects of a local action over the years. Goose captures were performed within the EU co-funded Interreg Invexo (www.invexo.eu) (2010-2012) and the Interreg 2Seas project RINSE (www.rinse-europe.eu) (2012-2014), which seeks to improve awareness of the threats posed by INNS, and the methods to address them. Future work will be to upscale management and implement adaptive management backed by population models and thorough monitoring. This requires continued investment in prevention, awareness raising and generating public support. At short term, if the result of these actions is to be maintained after the Interreg project RINSE finishes, there is an urgent need for institutional coordination, formalised cooperation between stakeholders and structural funding of this initiative. Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper Barnacle goose Branta canadensis Branta leucopsis Canada Goose Research Institute Nature and Forest: Research outputs Canada