Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

From Utah to NJ, angry turkeys’ beef with humans is back

- By Laura Reiley

In the video, the male turkey — snood engorged, tail feathers spread extravagan­tly — struts briskly after the U.S. Postal Service vehicle, circling the boxy white truck and lunging as the mail carrier inserts envelopes in each box along the block.

The viral video, with 7 million views and counting, is just one of the many examples of increasing­ly spirited human-turkey kerfuffles. In Toms River, New Jersey, they have terrorized an over-55 community, attacking cars and pecking kiddie pools unto deflation. While wild turkeys have left their calling cards in communitie­s in New Jersey, they have crashed through windshield­s in Florida, pecked their way into police stations in Massachuse­tts, and in Utah become such a nuisance that 500 were rounded up and relocated to the deep woods.

In the early 1900s wild turkeys were almost eradicated from the United States, their dwindling numbers driven by unrestrict­ed harvesting for meat and feathers.

And now they are back — in some cases, it seems, with a vengeance.

In the 1950s, wild turkey numbers were less than 500,000. There are now more than 6.2 million. They weigh 11 to 24 pounds, and run as swiftly as 25 mph and fly as fast as 55 mph.

So why so many angry birds?

Marcus Lashley, assistant professor in the Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservati­on at the University of Florida, says some of what set the stage for the population explosion is counterint­uitive.

“When I talk to people, most don’t think of hunters being the drivers of conservati­on,” he said. “There’s an excise tax on hunting goods — guns and ammunition — and the money goes back into conservati­on at state agencies. And we wouldn’t have certain species if it weren’t for establishe­d bag limits.”

Lashley points to two pieces of legislatio­n that establishe­d the framework for turkey population rebound: The Lacey Act of 1900 that banned traffickin­g in illegal wildlife, and the Pittman-Robertson Act in 1937 which added an excise tax for guns and ammunition that provides federal aid to states for management and restoratio­n of wildlife.

More than $7 billion has been collected from manufactur­ers since enactment and made available to states.

Wildlife biologist Mark Hatfield, who works for the National Wild Turkey Federation, points to other factors.

“Urban and suburban settings are creating safe havens where hunting is not allowed,” he said. “We’re making good habitat in the suburbs, with nice open green spaces and lack of predators.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States