Successful use of Alarm/Alert Call Playback to end Canada Goose Problems at an Ohio Business Park (Poster)

Burgeoning continental resident Canada goose populations have led to increases in aircraft strikes. Once on or near airfields, geese have proven difficult to move and keep away. Playback of naturally recorded alarm and alert calls of the species was coupled with multiple harassment techniques to det...

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Main Author: Whitford, Philip C.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/birdstrike2002/51
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/birdstrike2002/article/1050/viewcontent/2002_BSA_abstracts_51.pdf
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spelling ftunivnebraskali:oai:digitalcommons.unl.edu:birdstrike2002-1050 2023-11-12T04:15:34+01:00 Successful use of Alarm/Alert Call Playback to end Canada Goose Problems at an Ohio Business Park (Poster) Whitford, Philip C. 2002-10-24T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/birdstrike2002/51 https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/birdstrike2002/article/1050/viewcontent/2002_BSA_abstracts_51.pdf unknown DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/birdstrike2002/51 https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/birdstrike2002/article/1050/viewcontent/2002_BSA_abstracts_51.pdf 2002 Bird Strike Committee-USA/Canada, 4th Annual Meeting, Sacramento, CA Environmental Health and Protection text 2002 ftunivnebraskali 2023-10-30T10:23:43Z Burgeoning continental resident Canada goose populations have led to increases in aircraft strikes. Once on or near airfields, geese have proven difficult to move and keep away. Playback of naturally recorded alarm and alert calls of the species was coupled with multiple harassment techniques to determine if this strategy would prove effective at removal of long-term resident geese from a 24-ha business park in Dayton, Ohio. The study began 26 February 2002, following territorial establishment by the geese, and continued until the last few geese had abandoned the property as of 14 May 2002. Most geese present were reusing nest territories from previous years, and thus strong nest-site fidelity made these perhaps the most difficult of all geese to remove in a nonlethal manner. Call playback used three “Goosebuster” units (Bird-X Corp. Inc., Chicago IL). Daily direct human harassment consisted of chasing geese on foot and placing objects such as owl decoys, sticks, or balloons in nests. Other harassment included sporadic use of two Chesapeake retrievers over 7 mornings, but this harassment was not considered essential to discourage return by geese. Reports of goose aggression toward and injury to employees fell from 32 and 2 cases, respectively, in 2001 to zero in 2002. Employee time spent in harassment fell from 3-4 hours/day at the start to under 15 minutes/day. Goose droppings/100 m of walks fell from a mean of 195.7 to 3.3 between 26 February and 24 March 2002, a 98% reduction (P < 0.01), and remained low thereafter. Twice daily cleaning of walks done prior to the study was deemed unnecessary by week 2 of the study, more than offsetting employee time in harassment activities. Continued alarm-call playback at random 10- to 20-minute settings appeared to help prevent return of resident geese or recolonization of the property by other geese. Goose use of the property dropped from 1600-1800 goose-hours/day before testing to fewer than 150 goose-hours/day by week 3 and to zero hours by May. Similar techniques ... Text Canada Goose University of Nebraska-Lincoln: DigitalCommons@UNL Canada Dayton ENVELOPE(-158.683,-158.683,-85.733,-85.733)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Nebraska-Lincoln: DigitalCommons@UNL
op_collection_id ftunivnebraskali
language unknown
topic Environmental Health and Protection
spellingShingle Environmental Health and Protection
Whitford, Philip C.
Successful use of Alarm/Alert Call Playback to end Canada Goose Problems at an Ohio Business Park (Poster)
topic_facet Environmental Health and Protection
description Burgeoning continental resident Canada goose populations have led to increases in aircraft strikes. Once on or near airfields, geese have proven difficult to move and keep away. Playback of naturally recorded alarm and alert calls of the species was coupled with multiple harassment techniques to determine if this strategy would prove effective at removal of long-term resident geese from a 24-ha business park in Dayton, Ohio. The study began 26 February 2002, following territorial establishment by the geese, and continued until the last few geese had abandoned the property as of 14 May 2002. Most geese present were reusing nest territories from previous years, and thus strong nest-site fidelity made these perhaps the most difficult of all geese to remove in a nonlethal manner. Call playback used three “Goosebuster” units (Bird-X Corp. Inc., Chicago IL). Daily direct human harassment consisted of chasing geese on foot and placing objects such as owl decoys, sticks, or balloons in nests. Other harassment included sporadic use of two Chesapeake retrievers over 7 mornings, but this harassment was not considered essential to discourage return by geese. Reports of goose aggression toward and injury to employees fell from 32 and 2 cases, respectively, in 2001 to zero in 2002. Employee time spent in harassment fell from 3-4 hours/day at the start to under 15 minutes/day. Goose droppings/100 m of walks fell from a mean of 195.7 to 3.3 between 26 February and 24 March 2002, a 98% reduction (P < 0.01), and remained low thereafter. Twice daily cleaning of walks done prior to the study was deemed unnecessary by week 2 of the study, more than offsetting employee time in harassment activities. Continued alarm-call playback at random 10- to 20-minute settings appeared to help prevent return of resident geese or recolonization of the property by other geese. Goose use of the property dropped from 1600-1800 goose-hours/day before testing to fewer than 150 goose-hours/day by week 3 and to zero hours by May. Similar techniques ...
format Text
author Whitford, Philip C.
author_facet Whitford, Philip C.
author_sort Whitford, Philip C.
title Successful use of Alarm/Alert Call Playback to end Canada Goose Problems at an Ohio Business Park (Poster)
title_short Successful use of Alarm/Alert Call Playback to end Canada Goose Problems at an Ohio Business Park (Poster)
title_full Successful use of Alarm/Alert Call Playback to end Canada Goose Problems at an Ohio Business Park (Poster)
title_fullStr Successful use of Alarm/Alert Call Playback to end Canada Goose Problems at an Ohio Business Park (Poster)
title_full_unstemmed Successful use of Alarm/Alert Call Playback to end Canada Goose Problems at an Ohio Business Park (Poster)
title_sort successful use of alarm/alert call playback to end canada goose problems at an ohio business park (poster)
publisher DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln
publishDate 2002
url https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/birdstrike2002/51
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/birdstrike2002/article/1050/viewcontent/2002_BSA_abstracts_51.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-158.683,-158.683,-85.733,-85.733)
geographic Canada
Dayton
geographic_facet Canada
Dayton
genre Canada Goose
genre_facet Canada Goose
op_source 2002 Bird Strike Committee-USA/Canada, 4th Annual Meeting, Sacramento, CA
op_relation https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/birdstrike2002/51
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/birdstrike2002/article/1050/viewcontent/2002_BSA_abstracts_51.pdf
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