Hazing of Canada Geese is Unlikely to Reduce Nuisance Populations in Urban and Suburban Communities

Growing populations of resident Canada geese (Branta canadensis) have caused increased nuisance problems in urban and suburban communities. Hazing, or persistent harassment, is often recommended as a nonlethal management strategy to alleviate these problems. Does hazing simply cause a local redistri...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robin A. Holevinski, Paul D. Curtis, Richard A. Malecki
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Utah State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26077/9y1z-5857
https://doaj.org/article/294eb6152de24b90a2653803415cec73
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:294eb6152de24b90a2653803415cec73 2023-05-15T15:46:17+02:00 Hazing of Canada Geese is Unlikely to Reduce Nuisance Populations in Urban and Suburban Communities Robin A. Holevinski Paul D. Curtis Richard A. Malecki 2017-02-01 https://doi.org/10.26077/9y1z-5857 https://doaj.org/article/294eb6152de24b90a2653803415cec73 en eng Utah State University doi:10.26077/9y1z-5857 2155-3874 https://doaj.org/article/294eb6152de24b90a2653803415cec73 undefined Human-Wildlife Interactions, Vol 1, Iss 2 (2017) border collies branta canadensis canada geese hazing human–wildlife conflicts hunting mortality lasers nuisance control pyrotechnics remote-controlled boat demo hist Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2017 fttriple https://doi.org/10.26077/9y1z-5857 2023-01-22T19:11:24Z Growing populations of resident Canada geese (Branta canadensis) have caused increased nuisance problems in urban and suburban communities. Hazing, or persistent harassment, is often recommended as a nonlethal management strategy to alleviate these problems. Does hazing simply cause a local redistribution of birds, or can it solve nuisance problems by pushing geese to rural areas where hunting mortality could reduce the population? To answer this question, we marked 368 adult and 400 juvenile geese with leg bands in 1 urban and 1 suburban community in western New York State during June 2002 and 2003. This sample included 30 adult females with radio-transmitters and 151 adults with individually coded neck bands. From August 15 to September 25 and October 25 to November 15, we subjected these geese and their flock mates to post-molt hazing with border collies, lasers, pyrotechnics, remote-controlled boats, strobe lights, kayaks, a goose distress call device, or a combination of these techniques. Hazing was most successful using border collies in conjunction with remote-controlled boats (>90% of geese removed in 97% of 37 events), border collies alone (94% of 113 events), and nocturnal use of lasers (64% of 134 events). Radio-marked individuals demonstrated a strong affinity to hazing sites, averaging 16.9 hazing events per individual. Geese moved to areas where hazing was not permitted and were available for hazing only 51% of the time (n = 739). Geese moved 1.18 km (SD = 0.91)events, which was not far enough to place them in areas open to hunting. Although hunting was permitted >5 km from hazing treatment sites, only 13% (SE = 0.01) of adult geese and 7% (SE = 0.01) of juveniles were harvested in 2 years. Hazing alone is unlikely to reduce goose populations in urban and suburban communities by exposing them to hunting in adjacent rural areas Article in Journal/Newspaper Branta canadensis Unknown Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic border collies
branta canadensis
canada geese
hazing
human–wildlife conflicts
hunting mortality
lasers
nuisance control
pyrotechnics
remote-controlled boat
demo
hist
spellingShingle border collies
branta canadensis
canada geese
hazing
human–wildlife conflicts
hunting mortality
lasers
nuisance control
pyrotechnics
remote-controlled boat
demo
hist
Robin A. Holevinski
Paul D. Curtis
Richard A. Malecki
Hazing of Canada Geese is Unlikely to Reduce Nuisance Populations in Urban and Suburban Communities
topic_facet border collies
branta canadensis
canada geese
hazing
human–wildlife conflicts
hunting mortality
lasers
nuisance control
pyrotechnics
remote-controlled boat
demo
hist
description Growing populations of resident Canada geese (Branta canadensis) have caused increased nuisance problems in urban and suburban communities. Hazing, or persistent harassment, is often recommended as a nonlethal management strategy to alleviate these problems. Does hazing simply cause a local redistribution of birds, or can it solve nuisance problems by pushing geese to rural areas where hunting mortality could reduce the population? To answer this question, we marked 368 adult and 400 juvenile geese with leg bands in 1 urban and 1 suburban community in western New York State during June 2002 and 2003. This sample included 30 adult females with radio-transmitters and 151 adults with individually coded neck bands. From August 15 to September 25 and October 25 to November 15, we subjected these geese and their flock mates to post-molt hazing with border collies, lasers, pyrotechnics, remote-controlled boats, strobe lights, kayaks, a goose distress call device, or a combination of these techniques. Hazing was most successful using border collies in conjunction with remote-controlled boats (>90% of geese removed in 97% of 37 events), border collies alone (94% of 113 events), and nocturnal use of lasers (64% of 134 events). Radio-marked individuals demonstrated a strong affinity to hazing sites, averaging 16.9 hazing events per individual. Geese moved to areas where hazing was not permitted and were available for hazing only 51% of the time (n = 739). Geese moved 1.18 km (SD = 0.91)events, which was not far enough to place them in areas open to hunting. Although hunting was permitted >5 km from hazing treatment sites, only 13% (SE = 0.01) of adult geese and 7% (SE = 0.01) of juveniles were harvested in 2 years. Hazing alone is unlikely to reduce goose populations in urban and suburban communities by exposing them to hunting in adjacent rural areas
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Robin A. Holevinski
Paul D. Curtis
Richard A. Malecki
author_facet Robin A. Holevinski
Paul D. Curtis
Richard A. Malecki
author_sort Robin A. Holevinski
title Hazing of Canada Geese is Unlikely to Reduce Nuisance Populations in Urban and Suburban Communities
title_short Hazing of Canada Geese is Unlikely to Reduce Nuisance Populations in Urban and Suburban Communities
title_full Hazing of Canada Geese is Unlikely to Reduce Nuisance Populations in Urban and Suburban Communities
title_fullStr Hazing of Canada Geese is Unlikely to Reduce Nuisance Populations in Urban and Suburban Communities
title_full_unstemmed Hazing of Canada Geese is Unlikely to Reduce Nuisance Populations in Urban and Suburban Communities
title_sort hazing of canada geese is unlikely to reduce nuisance populations in urban and suburban communities
publisher Utah State University
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.26077/9y1z-5857
https://doaj.org/article/294eb6152de24b90a2653803415cec73
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Branta canadensis
genre_facet Branta canadensis
op_source Human-Wildlife Interactions, Vol 1, Iss 2 (2017)
op_relation doi:10.26077/9y1z-5857
2155-3874
https://doaj.org/article/294eb6152de24b90a2653803415cec73
op_rights undefined
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26077/9y1z-5857
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