Santa Fe New Mexican

Overrun neighborho­od to snip peacocks — and they don’t mean feathers

- By Patricia Mazzei

PINECREST, Fla. — The prevailing theory about why the peacocks flocked to suburban Pinecrest is that, like many a Floridian, they went hunting for better real estate.

Long a mainstay in bohemian Coconut Grove, a Miami neighborho­od up the road, the nonnative birds began making their way south in recent years, local officials suspect, because old Grove cottages were being turned into immense modern houses that chipped away at the area’s lush tree canopy. In the affluent village of Pinecrest, the peafowl found larger lots with plenty of greenery that were far more to their liking.

The birds, however, were not so much to their new human neighbors’ liking. The peacocks scratched the roofs of stately homes, pecked the paint off fancy cars and defecated on manicured driveways. Their piercing squawks — “aa-AAH! aa-AAH!” — often woke residents before dawn.

So Pinecrest devised a novel plan: peacock vasectomie­s.

Snip one male peacock, the thinking goes, and it will no longer be able to fertilize the eggs of the female peahens in its harem.

“Peacocks are bona fide polygamist­s,” said Dr. Don J. Harris, the veterinari­an hired by Pinecrest to perform the procedure. “We’re going to catch one peacock and probably stop seven females from reproducin­g. It’s going to have an exponentia­l benefit.”

No one knows if, or how well, the Pinecrest pilot program will work. But in balmy South Florida, where people have little choice but to coexist with wildlife both native (alligators, sharks) and invasive (pythons, iguanas), it is a new way to try to deal with an old problem.

“I certainly wouldn’t want to kill them — God, no,” said Gerald Greenberg, who has about seven peafowl living in an oak tree in his front yard. But, he added, “We’ve got to do something.”

What makes Florida different, said Ron Magill, the communicat­ions director for Zoo Miami, is that in most other parts of the country, winter will kill off most exotic species.

“When those animals get out here in South Florida, they’ve entered Club Med,” he said. “This is paradise.”

Iridescent peacocks have roamed some of greater Miami’s neighborho­ods for decades, with little consensus about what to do about them. To their defenders, they are majestic and beautiful. To their critics, they are an unabated nuisance.

In 2001, when the peafowl population was far smaller, Miami-Dade County made killing or capturing them illegal, with an exception for homeowners to remove birds from their property without harming them. Many municipali­ties, including Miami, are bird sanctuarie­s.

But last year, as more communitie­s complained about peacocks destroying property, a divided County Commission voted to allow municipal government­s to submit “peafowl mitigation plans.” Pinecrest, a village of about 18,000, was the first to do so with its vasectomy plan, which county commission­ers approved last month. Shannon del Prado, the council member who proposed the program, said a few people had written to say that the birds should be left alone.

“‘You’re trying to eradicate the peacock,’” she said someone told her. “That’s really not the case. I have a rescue cat, but she’s fixed.”

Others have reacted like David O. Markus, a longtime Pinecrest resident who calls the peafowl a “plague.” A peacock attacked his Tesla, leaving it scratched up. (The males are thought to see their reflection­s in the paint, misidentif­y them as rivals, and peck away.)

Greenberg, a lawyer, said he will sometimes be on a Zoom call and a peacock will screech.

“People from other parts of the country will pause and ask me what that noise is,” he said. “I will explain that they have pigeons — and we have peacocks.”

 ?? ALFONSO DURAN THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A male peacock surveys a street in Florida this month. The birds, which thrive in the state with its temperate winters, are breeding and running amok in Pinecrest, Fla., damaging property and making loud noises. The village will test a novel solution to rein them in: peacock vasectomie­s.
ALFONSO DURAN THE NEW YORK TIMES A male peacock surveys a street in Florida this month. The birds, which thrive in the state with its temperate winters, are breeding and running amok in Pinecrest, Fla., damaging property and making loud noises. The village will test a novel solution to rein them in: peacock vasectomie­s.

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