Brood Movements of Eastern Prairie Population Canada Geese: Potential Influence of Light Goose Abundance

During the summers of 2000–2002, we used radio telemetry to document Eastern Prairie Population (EPP) Canada goose (Branta canadensis interior) brood movements and use of brood-rearing habitat. We compared these data with similar data collected in 1976–1978 (Didiuk 1979), prior to a significant incr...

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Main Authors: Nack, Robert R, Andersen, David E
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183605
id ftunivminnesdc:oai:conservancy.umn.edu:11299/183605
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivminnesdc:oai:conservancy.umn.edu:11299/183605 2023-05-15T15:46:23+02:00 Brood Movements of Eastern Prairie Population Canada Geese: Potential Influence of Light Goose Abundance Nack, Robert R Andersen, David E 2006 http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183605 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183605 Report 2006 ftunivminnesdc 2020-02-02T14:52:14Z During the summers of 2000–2002, we used radio telemetry to document Eastern Prairie Population (EPP) Canada goose (Branta canadensis interior) brood movements and use of brood-rearing habitat. We compared these data with similar data collected in 1976–1978 (Didiuk 1979), prior to a significant increase in the size of the midcontinent light goose (lesser snow geese [Chen caerulescens] and Ross’s geese [C. rossii]) population and consequent habitat alteration near Cape Churchill, Manitoba. Since the late 1970s, use of traditional EPP Canada goose broodrearing areas by light geese has increased significantly near Cape Churchill, and the density of nesting EPP Canada geese has declined. Alteration of brood-rearing habitat has been hypothesized as a cause of the decline in EPP breeding density, as natal dispersal to more distant brood-rearing areas may influence future recruitment into the local breeding population. In 1976–1978, 20 (95%) of 21 radio-marked broods nesting in beach ridge/sedge meadow habitat moved to salt marsh brood-rearing areas; however, only 5 (19%) of 27 Canada geese, nesting in the same habitat, made initial movements to these traditional salt marsh brood-rearing areas in 2000–2002. In 2000–2002, 30 (75%) of 40 geese with broods made initial movements to beach ridge/sedge meadow habitat—10 of these broods eventually moved to salt-marsh habitats later in the brood-rearing period (v date ¼ 22 days postmedian hatch). Mean brood home range size from 2001–2002 in coastal and inland habitats nearly doubled compared to the mean brood home range size during 1976–1978. Eastern Prairie Population Canada geese currently use broodrearing habitat other than the coastal salt marshes they used prior to habitat alteration resulting from foraging by light geese. A shift in the use of brood-rearing habitat could potentially reduce nest densities on the study area if first-time breeders nest closer to distant brood-rearing areas. The impact of alternative brood-rearing habitat on gosling growth and survival for EPP geese is unknown, but foraging in poorer quality broodrearing habitat may also contribute to the observed decline in nesting density. (JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT 70(2):435–442; 2006 Report Branta canadensis Canada Goose Cape Churchill Churchill University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy Canada Cape Churchill ENVELOPE(-93.218,-93.218,58.763,58.763)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy
op_collection_id ftunivminnesdc
language English
description During the summers of 2000–2002, we used radio telemetry to document Eastern Prairie Population (EPP) Canada goose (Branta canadensis interior) brood movements and use of brood-rearing habitat. We compared these data with similar data collected in 1976–1978 (Didiuk 1979), prior to a significant increase in the size of the midcontinent light goose (lesser snow geese [Chen caerulescens] and Ross’s geese [C. rossii]) population and consequent habitat alteration near Cape Churchill, Manitoba. Since the late 1970s, use of traditional EPP Canada goose broodrearing areas by light geese has increased significantly near Cape Churchill, and the density of nesting EPP Canada geese has declined. Alteration of brood-rearing habitat has been hypothesized as a cause of the decline in EPP breeding density, as natal dispersal to more distant brood-rearing areas may influence future recruitment into the local breeding population. In 1976–1978, 20 (95%) of 21 radio-marked broods nesting in beach ridge/sedge meadow habitat moved to salt marsh brood-rearing areas; however, only 5 (19%) of 27 Canada geese, nesting in the same habitat, made initial movements to these traditional salt marsh brood-rearing areas in 2000–2002. In 2000–2002, 30 (75%) of 40 geese with broods made initial movements to beach ridge/sedge meadow habitat—10 of these broods eventually moved to salt-marsh habitats later in the brood-rearing period (v date ¼ 22 days postmedian hatch). Mean brood home range size from 2001–2002 in coastal and inland habitats nearly doubled compared to the mean brood home range size during 1976–1978. Eastern Prairie Population Canada geese currently use broodrearing habitat other than the coastal salt marshes they used prior to habitat alteration resulting from foraging by light geese. A shift in the use of brood-rearing habitat could potentially reduce nest densities on the study area if first-time breeders nest closer to distant brood-rearing areas. The impact of alternative brood-rearing habitat on gosling growth and survival for EPP geese is unknown, but foraging in poorer quality broodrearing habitat may also contribute to the observed decline in nesting density. (JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT 70(2):435–442; 2006
format Report
author Nack, Robert R
Andersen, David E
spellingShingle Nack, Robert R
Andersen, David E
Brood Movements of Eastern Prairie Population Canada Geese: Potential Influence of Light Goose Abundance
author_facet Nack, Robert R
Andersen, David E
author_sort Nack, Robert R
title Brood Movements of Eastern Prairie Population Canada Geese: Potential Influence of Light Goose Abundance
title_short Brood Movements of Eastern Prairie Population Canada Geese: Potential Influence of Light Goose Abundance
title_full Brood Movements of Eastern Prairie Population Canada Geese: Potential Influence of Light Goose Abundance
title_fullStr Brood Movements of Eastern Prairie Population Canada Geese: Potential Influence of Light Goose Abundance
title_full_unstemmed Brood Movements of Eastern Prairie Population Canada Geese: Potential Influence of Light Goose Abundance
title_sort brood movements of eastern prairie population canada geese: potential influence of light goose abundance
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183605
long_lat ENVELOPE(-93.218,-93.218,58.763,58.763)
geographic Canada
Cape Churchill
geographic_facet Canada
Cape Churchill
genre Branta canadensis
Canada Goose
Cape Churchill
Churchill
genre_facet Branta canadensis
Canada Goose
Cape Churchill
Churchill
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183605
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