Edmonton Journal

Too many geese a huge honking problem for North, experts say

- BOB WEBER

Wildlife scientists want Inuit hunters to kill more Arcticnest­ing geese in an effort to manage population­s so out of control the birds are destroying their own habitat.

Experts acknowledg­e the plan isn’t likely to work and admit they don’t know what to do about ballooning numbers of Ross’s geese that are denuding large areas of the North.

“It’s really unpreceden­ted in waterfowl management history to have a population that’s out of control and can’t be controlled through hunting,” said Jim Leafloor of the Canadian Wildlife Service. “We’re not really sure at this point where it’s all going to lead.”

Ross’s geese — which migrate between Canada’s northern coastline and as far south as California — were once hunted so extensivel­y that their numbers were down to a few thousand in the 1930s. Environmen­tal protection­s and the spread of agricultur­al practices that favour bird foraging have changed all that.

Kiel Drake of Bird Studies Canada estimates there are now about two million of the small, white geese. Together with about five million lesser snow geese — which have tripled their numbers since the 1970s and have similar habits — that spells big honking trouble.

“It’s the way they feed,” Leafloor said. “They strip vegetation from fairly large areas.”

Sky-filling flocks are hammering their tundra nesting grounds in the Queen Maud Bird Sanctuary along the Northwest Passage. The destructio­n follows their migration path south, through the coastal marshes of Hudson Bay and James Bay.

“A lot of that habitat is already destroyed,” Leafloor said.

“The losses there just continue to mount and expand into other areas.”

Grazing geese strip the land bare, exposing soil and peat. Recovery is slow in the Arctic’s cold climate and poor soil.

Ripping out vegetation also changes the flow of soil moisture. It draws salts to the surface and prevents normal plants from growing back. That, in turn, affects other birds and animals.

Last week, wildlife service officials asked the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board to agree to have Ross’s geese declared overabunda­nt, which would allow managers to expand the hunting season. The board has made a recommenda­tion to federal Environmen­t Minister Peter Kent, who is to make the final decision.

“We think the population of (Ross’s geese) might be small enough that it could be controlled through hunting,” Leafloor said.

Snow geese were declared overabunda­nt in 1999. Hunters are allowed to shoot them spring through fall, but it hasn’t made much difference.

“We think that’s an example of a population that’s beyond the ability of hunters to control.”

 ?? JOSH WHITE/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Scientists hope increasing hunting pressure will bring the exploding population of Ross’ geese in the Arctic under control and stop them from destroying their own habitat.
JOSH WHITE/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Scientists hope increasing hunting pressure will bring the exploding population of Ross’ geese in the Arctic under control and stop them from destroying their own habitat.

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