Acts of aggression by nesting geese
A male Canada goose vigorously defending his female during a nest check in an urban parking lot. Giant Canada geese now have many positive and negative connotations across the country but were near extinction early in the 19th century. Reintroduction efforts and ability to thrive in urban environmen...
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ftunivillidea:oai:www.ideals.illinois.edu:2142/106781 2023-05-15T15:48:55+02:00 Acts of aggression by nesting geese Askren, Ryan 2020 http://hdl.handle.net/2142/106781 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/2142/106781 Copyright 2020 Ryan Askren Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences text still image 2020 ftunivillidea 2020-04-18T22:27:54Z A male Canada goose vigorously defending his female during a nest check in an urban parking lot. Giant Canada geese now have many positive and negative connotations across the country but were near extinction early in the 19th century. Reintroduction efforts and ability to thrive in urban environments have led to increases in their populations. Abundances of Canada geese are economically important as a games species and serve important ecological roles. However, their ability to thrive in close proximity to humans has been associated with a range of conflicts. their feces, risk to air traffic, and direct attacks by nesting geese on humans. The photographer's research use GPS transmitters and remote biosensing to examine behavioral trade-offs geese make in cities versus rural areas. Open Text Canada Goose University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: IDEALS (Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship) Canada |
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Open Polar |
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University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: IDEALS (Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship) |
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ftunivillidea |
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unknown |
topic |
Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences |
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Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences Askren, Ryan Acts of aggression by nesting geese |
topic_facet |
Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences |
description |
A male Canada goose vigorously defending his female during a nest check in an urban parking lot. Giant Canada geese now have many positive and negative connotations across the country but were near extinction early in the 19th century. Reintroduction efforts and ability to thrive in urban environments have led to increases in their populations. Abundances of Canada geese are economically important as a games species and serve important ecological roles. However, their ability to thrive in close proximity to humans has been associated with a range of conflicts. their feces, risk to air traffic, and direct attacks by nesting geese on humans. The photographer's research use GPS transmitters and remote biosensing to examine behavioral trade-offs geese make in cities versus rural areas. Open |
format |
Text |
author |
Askren, Ryan |
author_facet |
Askren, Ryan |
author_sort |
Askren, Ryan |
title |
Acts of aggression by nesting geese |
title_short |
Acts of aggression by nesting geese |
title_full |
Acts of aggression by nesting geese |
title_fullStr |
Acts of aggression by nesting geese |
title_full_unstemmed |
Acts of aggression by nesting geese |
title_sort |
acts of aggression by nesting geese |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2142/106781 |
geographic |
Canada |
geographic_facet |
Canada |
genre |
Canada Goose |
genre_facet |
Canada Goose |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/2142/106781 |
op_rights |
Copyright 2020 Ryan Askren |
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1766384022157524992 |