University of Illinois College of ACES
Study: Canada geese beat humans in longstanding territory battle
Send a link to a friend
[January 03, 2023]
Canada geese collide with aircraft, intimidate
unassuming joggers, and leave lawns and sidewalks spattered with
prodigious piles of poop. They’re widely considered nuisance birds,
and municipalities invest considerable time and money harassing
geese to relocate the feisty flocks. But new University of Illinois
research shows standard goose harassment efforts aren’t effective,
especially in winter when birds should be most susceptible to scare
tactics.
“Harassment is part of an energy equation. If a bird is hanging
around Chicago in winter, it's probably not in good shape. It’s cold
and doesn't have a lot of food,” says Mike Ward, professor in the
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences (NRES) at
Illinois and co-author on the study. “The goal of harassment is
never to hurt the geese, but to get them to use up energy during an
already tough season, forcing them to migrate to warmer climates.
Unfortunately, we found that doesn’t happen in practice.”
The study isn’t the first to find harassment doesn’t work, but it is
the first to explain why. The researchers used GPS transmitters with
Fitbit-like movement trackers to learn where Canada geese go and how
their behavior changes when they’re harassed.
Ward’s doctoral student, Ryan Askren, now a postdoctoral researcher
at the University of Arkansas-Monticello, worked with USDA-Wildlife
Services personnel to harass Canada geese at Marquette Park near
Midway Airport in Chicago. During the winters of 2017 and 2018,
members of the research team walked or drove toward geese while
clacking boards together.
Did the geese leave? Yes. But they returned to the area almost two
times faster than on days when they weren’t harassed and left the
park on their own.
“When they’re not being harassed, they're making the choice to leave
the park because it's beneficial to them – there’s a resource
elsewhere they want to access,” Askren says. “Whereas when we’re
harassing them, they probably have a biological reason to be there.
There's some sort of resource, such as food or water, and they want
to be there at that moment.
“When we harass them, it causes them to leave momentarily, but more
than likely they still have that drive to come back. So they're
returning more quickly, whereas the geese that leave in the absence
of harassment are staying away to make use of a resource elsewhere.”
Most harassed geese either moved elsewhere in the same park or were
back within the hour. Those that did leave went to commercial
rooftops, railyards, other parks, water treatment ponds, and sports
fields; not exactly migrating long-distance and away from the urban
environment.
As for harassment draining energy reserves during a vulnerable time,
Ward and Askren didn’t find much evidence for that in geese
behavior. Harassed birds spent a little more time flying and in
alert mode than geese that weren’t harassed, but they spent just as
much time foraging and resting, important factors in the energetic
equation.
“I thought using these Fitbit-like devices on the
neck collar was a creative way to understand resting, flying, or
foraging behaviors. And when Ryan was doing all this physical work
to figure out what this accelerometry data would tell us, I was very
eager to see what the results were,” Ward says. “But when it was all
analyzed, I was like, ‘Wow, that's not too exciting.’ Basically,
when you harass, they fly a little bit more because you're scaring
them, or they might be alert a little more, but it wasn't a
fundamental difference.”
[to top of second column] |
Although harassment didn’t change
geese behavior much, the research team noticed a pattern that
could be exploited during the worst winter weather.
“If it was crazy cold and snowy, our colleagues did not go out
to harass the geese,” Ward says. “But that's probably when you
should harass because the geese are most stressed. If you look
at their behavior, they're going to areas just to rest and
essentially wait out this terrible weather. So if you could
harass them during those really tough times, they would probably
have to leave the area because they wouldn't be able to find the
resources they need to survive.”
Could the outcome have differed with another harassment method?
The researchers say it’s possible, but the methods showing the
most promise don’t usually go over well with the public.
“The literature suggests unless there's a lethal aspect to
harassment, unless they really have a strong fear that they're
going to die or some of them are actually dying, then most
harassment methods just don't seem to be very effective,” Askren
says.
Lastly, the research team wondered if Chicago-based geese simply
had acquired more grit in the busy urban environment, making
them less easily spooked. Because they had tracked these geese
long-term for other studies, the researchers knew which geese
were migrants from rural areas and which were longtime Chicago
residents. Turns out, neither group was particularly perturbed
by harassment.
Askren credits Canada geese with strong adaptability, excellent
memory, and a keen ability to discern legitimate threats from
mild annoyances. It’s why we likely won’t be rid of them anytime
soon.
Ward agrees. “People don't realize how smart geese are. They've
learned what the real risks are over the course of their lives
or from each other. Maybe we'll figure out a good harassment
technique, but it's likely they're going to continue to increase
in urban areas because they found a good place. They're nesting
on top of buildings. I mean, who would have ever thought a goose
would nest on top of a building? They should be nesting in
wetlands. But they're very adaptable.”
The article, “Behavioral responses of Canada geese to winter
harassment in the context of human-wildlife conflicts,” is
published in Wildlife Society Bulletin [DOI: 10.1002/wsb.1384].
Authors include Ryan Askren, Mike Eichholz, Christopher Sharp,
Brian Washburn, Scott Beckerman, Craig Pullins, Auriel Fournier,
Jay Vonbank, Mitch Weegman, Heath Hagy, and Mike Ward. The work
was a collaborative project between the University of Illinois,
USDA-APHIS-Wildlife Services, the Illinois Department of Natural
Resources, the Canadian Wildlife Service, and Midway
International Airport.
The Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences
is in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental
Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
[Sources: Mike Ward and Ryan Askren
News writer: Lauren Quinn] |