Spring staging of Taiga Bean Goose Anser f. fabalis in southern Sweden 2007—estimate of the size of populations using the western and central flyways

The Taiga Bean Goose Anser fabalis fabalis is one of few goose species under current decline. The species uses three flyways: the Scandinavian population migrates west of the Baltic Sea and the Bothnian Bay, the Finnish and western Russian populations take a central flyway, and the central Russian p...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ornis Svecica
Main Authors: Skyllberg, Ulf, Tjernberg, Martin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BirdLife Sweden 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lub.lu.se/os/article/view/22677
https://doi.org/10.34080/os.v18.22677
Description
Summary:The Taiga Bean Goose Anser fabalis fabalis is one of few goose species under current decline. The species uses three flyways: the Scandinavian population migrates west of the Baltic Sea and the Bothnian Bay, the Finnish and western Russian populations take a central flyway, and the central Russian population migrates east of the Baltic Sea. On 17–21 March 2007, the number of birds using the western and the central flyways were counted at all staging sites in southern Sweden. During the count, practically the whole western and central flyway populations were concentrated in southern Sweden. We estimated the number of birds at 56,000. Recent estimates suggest that 5,000–6,000 of these birds breed in Scandinavia and use the western flyway. This means that approximately 50,000 birds used the central flyway. Assuming that a maximum of 30,000 birds wintered in Germany and used the eastern flyway, the global population of the Taiga Bean Goose amounted to a maximum of 85,000 birds. This is about 15,000 birds less than an estimate from 1999.