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

Growing breeding populations of geese exert a negative ecological, economic as well as social impact in Flanders and The Netherlands. These populations include invasive non-native greater Canada goose Branta canadensis, native greylag goose Anser anser, feral domestic goose A. anserf. domestica, mix...

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Main Authors: Adriaens, Tim, Van Daele, Paul, Devisscher, Sander, Huysentruyt, Frank, Voslamber, Berend, De Boer, Vincent, Devos, Koen, Casaer, Jim
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://data.inbo.be/pureportal/en/publications/integrated-management-of-invasive-geese-populations-in-an-international-context(4ca6d830-739b-4ead-ba3d-a71fc7138b5b).html
https://data.inbo.be/purews/files/1156729/O.TL.16_Adriaens.pdf
id ftonapublicatio:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/4ca6d830-739b-4ead-ba3d-a71fc7138b5b
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_00149
Invasive species (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00136
Invasive species (nature management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00028
Waterbirds
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00138
Hunting (fauna management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00140
Damage management
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/eendvogels_anseriformes_
waterfowl (Anseriformes)
Canadese gans
nijlgans
brandgans
grauwe gans
boerengans
soepgans
barnacle goose
Egyptian goose
Canada goose
feral goose
greylag goose
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/vogels_aves_
birds (Aves)
spellingShingle /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00149
Invasive species (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00136
Invasive species (nature management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00028
Waterbirds
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00138
Hunting (fauna management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00140
Damage management
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/eendvogels_anseriformes_
waterfowl (Anseriformes)
Canadese gans
nijlgans
brandgans
grauwe gans
boerengans
soepgans
barnacle goose
Egyptian goose
Canada goose
feral goose
greylag goose
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/vogels_aves_
birds (Aves)
Adriaens, Tim
Van Daele, Paul
Devisscher, Sander
Huysentruyt, Frank
Voslamber, Berend
De Boer, Vincent
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_00149
Invasive species (management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00136
Invasive species (nature management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00028
Waterbirds
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00138
Hunting (fauna management)
/dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00140
Damage management
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/eendvogels_anseriformes_
waterfowl (Anseriformes)
Canadese gans
nijlgans
brandgans
grauwe gans
boerengans
soepgans
barnacle goose
Egyptian goose
Canada goose
feral goose
greylag goose
/dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/vogels_aves_
birds (Aves)
description Growing breeding populations of geese exert a negative ecological, economic as well as social impact in Flanders and The Netherlands. These populations include invasive non-native greater Canada goose Branta canadensis, native greylag goose Anser anser, feral domestic goose A. anserf. domestica, mixed populations of wild and domesticated barnacle goose Branta leucopsis, as well as a number of non-native species like Egyptian goose Alopochen aegyptiacus, bar-headed goose A. indicus and magellan goose Chloephaga picta. The EU co-funded Interreg IV-A project INVEXO (www.invexo.be) (2009-2012) focused, among others, on the management of native and non-native summering geese. The general aim was to develop an integrated, sustainable management in favour of both biodiversity, agriculture and the recreational sector. The approach combined efforts on prevention with ethical management methods and a clear communication to different the stakeholders and the public. Management measures intervened on reproduction (pricking eggs) and on the number of birds (culling trough moult capturing and shooting). Measures were implemented opportunistically in space and time, resulting in a mixed, diffuse deployment throughout the project area. Limitations in the scientific follow-up did not allow to discern the effectiveness of separate management measures. However, the combined management efforts were closely monitored and their overall impact was assessed by annual counts of the summering geese populations in the region using a fixed sample of counting areas. The census showed greylag goose to be the most common species, followed by greater Canada goose, Egyptian goose, barnacle goose and feral goose. Trends in the average number of geese per municipality and per year were modelled using Generalised Estimating Equations (GEE GLM). The analysis showed a significant decrease in the number of Canada goose since the beginning of the project (2010 versus 2011 and 2012 respectively). It was unclear which population response (e.g. dispersion, reproduction) was responsible for this decline. When the province of east-flanders, where moult captures were applied most intensively, was considered separately, a significant yearly decrease was noted. Moreover, incorporating the number of Canada goose caught with moult captures as a fixed effect in the GEE model, showed a significant effect of caught numbers on modelled estimates. Although suggesting a link between moult captures and population numbers, this approach would assume other management efforts to be evenly applied and distributed over the project area, which was not the case. Moreover, the number of geese in the entire area hardly decreased in the last year of the project. Recent research indicates that Canada geese disperse over large distances within Western Europe, blurring a possibly significant effect of a local action over the years. For other species no trend could be detected. Future work will include dynamic population modelling to estimate the combined effect of management measures, as well as thorough monitoring of geese populations as the basic elements of a sound adaptive management plan for geese in the region. In addition, this approach requires continuous dialogue between partners and stakeholders. In this respect, the Invexo project has provided a strong impulse.
format Conference Object
author Adriaens, Tim
Van Daele, Paul
Devisscher, Sander
Huysentruyt, Frank
Voslamber, Berend
De Boer, Vincent
Devos, Koen
Casaer, Jim
author_facet Adriaens, Tim
Van Daele, Paul
Devisscher, Sander
Huysentruyt, Frank
Voslamber, Berend
De Boer, Vincent
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 2013
url https://data.inbo.be/pureportal/en/publications/integrated-management-of-invasive-geese-populations-in-an-international-context(4ca6d830-739b-4ead-ba3d-a71fc7138b5b).html
https://data.inbo.be/purews/files/1156729/O.TL.16_Adriaens.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 , Van Daele , P , Devisscher , S , Huysentruyt , F , Voslamber , B , De Boer , V , Devos , K & Casaer , J 2013 , ' Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context : a case study ' .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
_version_ 1766371073619656704
spelling ftonapublicatio:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/4ca6d830-739b-4ead-ba3d-a71fc7138b5b 2023-05-15T15:39:23+02:00 Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context:a case study Geïntegreerd beheer van invasieve ganzenpopulaties in internationale context:een case studie Adriaens, Tim Van Daele, Paul Devisscher, Sander Huysentruyt, Frank Voslamber, Berend De Boer, Vincent Devos, Koen Casaer, Jim 2013-08-27 application/pdf https://data.inbo.be/pureportal/en/publications/integrated-management-of-invasive-geese-populations-in-an-international-context(4ca6d830-739b-4ead-ba3d-a71fc7138b5b).html https://data.inbo.be/purews/files/1156729/O.TL.16_Adriaens.pdf eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Adriaens , T , Van Daele , P , Devisscher , S , Huysentruyt , F , Voslamber , B , De Boer , V , Devos , K & Casaer , J 2013 , ' Integrated management of invasive geese populations in an international context : a case study ' . /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00149 Invasive species (management) /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00136 Invasive species (nature management) /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00028 Waterbirds /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00138 Hunting (fauna management) /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00140 Damage management /dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/eendvogels_anseriformes_ waterfowl (Anseriformes) Canadese gans nijlgans brandgans grauwe gans boerengans soepgans barnacle goose Egyptian goose Canada goose feral goose greylag goose /dk/atira/pure/taxonomic/vogels_aves_ birds (Aves) conferenceObject 2013 ftonapublicatio 2016-06-23T19:12:10Z Growing breeding populations of geese exert a negative ecological, economic as well as social impact in Flanders and The Netherlands. These populations include invasive non-native greater Canada goose Branta canadensis, native greylag goose Anser anser, feral domestic goose A. anserf. domestica, mixed populations of wild and domesticated barnacle goose Branta leucopsis, as well as a number of non-native species like Egyptian goose Alopochen aegyptiacus, bar-headed goose A. indicus and magellan goose Chloephaga picta. The EU co-funded Interreg IV-A project INVEXO (www.invexo.be) (2009-2012) focused, among others, on the management of native and non-native summering geese. The general aim was to develop an integrated, sustainable management in favour of both biodiversity, agriculture and the recreational sector. The approach combined efforts on prevention with ethical management methods and a clear communication to different the stakeholders and the public. Management measures intervened on reproduction (pricking eggs) and on the number of birds (culling trough moult capturing and shooting). Measures were implemented opportunistically in space and time, resulting in a mixed, diffuse deployment throughout the project area. Limitations in the scientific follow-up did not allow to discern the effectiveness of separate management measures. However, the combined management efforts were closely monitored and their overall impact was assessed by annual counts of the summering geese populations in the region using a fixed sample of counting areas. The census showed greylag goose to be the most common species, followed by greater Canada goose, Egyptian goose, barnacle goose and feral goose. Trends in the average number of geese per municipality and per year were modelled using Generalised Estimating Equations (GEE GLM). The analysis showed a significant decrease in the number of Canada goose since the beginning of the project (2010 versus 2011 and 2012 respectively). It was unclear which population response (e.g. dispersion, reproduction) was responsible for this decline. When the province of east-flanders, where moult captures were applied most intensively, was considered separately, a significant yearly decrease was noted. Moreover, incorporating the number of Canada goose caught with moult captures as a fixed effect in the GEE model, showed a significant effect of caught numbers on modelled estimates. Although suggesting a link between moult captures and population numbers, this approach would assume other management efforts to be evenly applied and distributed over the project area, which was not the case. Moreover, the number of geese in the entire area hardly decreased in the last year of the project. Recent research indicates that Canada geese disperse over large distances within Western Europe, blurring a possibly significant effect of a local action over the years. For other species no trend could be detected. Future work will include dynamic population modelling to estimate the combined effect of management measures, as well as thorough monitoring of geese populations as the basic elements of a sound adaptive management plan for geese in the region. In addition, this approach requires continuous dialogue between partners and stakeholders. In this respect, the Invexo project has provided a strong impulse. Conference Object Barnacle goose Branta canadensis Branta leucopsis Canada Goose Research Institute Nature and Forest: Research outputs Canada