| Literature DB >> 28215010 |
David A Stroud1, Jesper Madsen2, Anthony D Fox2.
Abstract
Increasing abundance of geese in North America and Europe constitutes a major conservation success, but has caused increasing conflicts with economic, health and safety interests, as well as ecosystem impacts. Potential conflict resolution through a single, 'one size fits all' policy is hindered by differences in species' ecology, behaviour, abundance and population status, and in contrasting political and socio-economic environments across the flyways. Effective goose management requires coordinated application of a suite of tools from the local level to strategic flyway management actions. The European Goose Management Platform, established under the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds, aims to harmonise and prioritise management, monitoring and conservation efforts, sharing best practice internationally by facilitating agreed policies, coordinating flyway efforts, and sharing and exchanging experiences and information. This depends crucially upon adequate government financing, the collection of necessary monitoring data (e.g., on distribution, abundance, hunting bags, demography, ecosystem and agricultural damage), the collation and effective use of such data and information, as well as the evaluation of outcomes of existing management measures.Entities:
Keywords: Air-strike risk; Conflict resolution; Conservation policies; Crop damage; Ecosystem impacts; Human–wildlife conflict
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28215010 PMCID: PMC5316334 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-017-0903-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Responses to goose damage to farmland at varying scales
| Scale of intervention | Type of intervention | Methods used | Implementing agent | Problems | Some case-studies |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Local | Scaring from sensitive locations (fields/crops) | Gas guns, flags, streamers, scarecrows, kites, active scaring etc. | Individual farmer | Typically rapid habituation by geese at any location | van Roomen and Madsen ( |
| Local | Provision of sacrificial crops | Crop planting, change of cropping | Individual farmer | Cost to establish; attraction of geese, spill-over to adjacent farmland | Fox et al. ( |
| Regional (sub-national) | Displacement from sensitive to less sensitive areas | Creation of disturbance free refuge areas, typically (but not always) accompanied by disturbance in other areas | Groups of farmers, conservation agencies or other stakeholders | Locally can be successful but ultimately gives no constraint on population growth | van Roomen and Madsen ( |
| Regional to national | Wider scale financial compensation for economic losses or subsidies to allow geese | Financial payments (usually linked to other interventions) | State agencies | Financially unsustainable for growing populations | Anon ( |
| Regional to national | Regional population limitation | Legislative change; Adaptive Harvest Management | States and their agencies | Agreement on objectives and target levels; creation of adaptive harvest policy cycle including monitoring | McKenzie ( |
| International | Biogeographic population limitation | Legislative change; Adaptive Harvest Management | Multiple states and multilateral environment agencies | Agreement on objectives and target levels; creation of adaptive harvest policy cycle | Batt et al. ( |
Fig. 1Annual total of air passengers carried in flights from 26 European states, 1970–2014 (triangles), compared with the estimated European annual combined abundance of ten most numerous wild goose populations (squares—three populations of barnacle geese Branta leucopsis, dark-bellied brent geese B. bernicla bernicla, Nordic greylag goose Anser anser, tundra bean goose A. fabalis rossicus, two populations of pink-footed geese A. brachyrhynchus and two populations of greater white-fronted geese A. albifrons) for 1970–2013. Source for air passengers: World Bank, see http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/IS.AIR.PSGR/countries/EU?page=1&display=default
Legal status of European goose populations under both the EU Birds Directive (2009/147/EC) and AEWA. Birds Directive: taxa listed on Annex I require the classification of Special Protection Areas under Article 4; Annex IIA indicates the taxon may be potentially hunted in all Member States and IIB only in certain listed Member States (although for all Annex II taxa Member States may chose to nationally restrict hunting). AEWA’s Action Plan status indicates legal quarry status (AEWA 2015b)
| Species and race | Population | Birds Directive Annex I | Birds Directive Annex II | AEWA Action Plan |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Annex IIB | B2b | ||
|
| Svalbard/Denmark and UK | Annex IIB | A1c | |
|
| Canada and Greenland/Ireland | Annex IIB | A3a | |
|
| East Greenland/Scotland and Ireland | Annex I | B1 | |
|
| Svalbard/South-west Scotland | Annex I | A3a | |
|
| Russia/Germany and Netherlands | Annex I | C1 | |
|
| Annex I | A1a, A1b, A3a, A3c | ||
|
| Iceland/UK and Ireland | Annex IIA | C1 | |
|
| NW Europe/South-west Europe | Annex IIA | C1 | |
|
| Central Europe/North Africa | Annex IIA | B1 | |
|
| Black Sea and Turkey | Annex IIA | B1 | |
|
| North-east Europe/North-west Europe | Annex IIA | A3c* | |
|
| West and Central Siberia/NE and SW Europe | Annex IIA | C(1) | |
|
| East Greenland and Iceland/UK | Annex IIB | B2a | |
|
| Svalbard/North-west Europe | Annex IIB | B1 | |
|
| NW Siberia and NE Europe/North-west Europe | Annex IIB | C1 | |
|
| Western Siberia/Central Europe | Annex IIB | C1 | |
|
| Western Siberia/Black Sea and Turkey | Annex IIB | C1 | |
|
| Annex I | Annex IIB | A2* | |
|
| NE Europe and W Siberia/Black Sea and Caspian | Annex I | A1a, A1b, A2 | |
|
| Fennoscandia | Annex I | A1a, A1b, A1c |
* indicates that a population, otherwise protected, may be hunted on a sustainable use basis within the framework of an international species action plan. This shall seek to implement the principles of adaptive harvest management
Recommendations from the international conference on goose management, Denmark 2015. **An action that is planned (in whole or part) for relevant species through the operation of the European Goose Management Platform (EGMP). (Note that the list is not in priority order)
| Recommended actions | For delivery by | Action also relevant to |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Develop a common framework for assessing favourable conservation status and setting favourable reference values/target population levels at different scales | European Commission (EC); national authorities | Control; International |
| Develop advice on simple population modelling for use in data-poor situations | EGMP | Control |
| Collate better information on migratory routes and population structures of relevant species to support population modelling including coordinated population-wide counts at appropriate frequencies | Wetlands International Goose Specialist Group (GSG); national monitoring schemes | Control |
| Collate and analyse better data on productivity and other demographic factors, including from marked birds, to aid population modelling | GSG; national and regional monitoring schemes and study groups; EGMP | Control |
| Agree and promote common methodological standards to facilitate data sharing and joint analyses, and enhance availability of relevant open source data and information | GSG; research organisations; EGMP | |
| Promote greater research co-operation to avoid duplicative studies | GSG; research organisations; EGMP | |
| Involve the farming community in scientific studies and research including targeting them in the regular dissemination of derived information | Research organisations; farming stakeholders; EGMP | Stakeholders |
| Analyse the relationship between population size and crop damage to develop better methods for assessing, and metrics for reporting, ‘serious’ damage for use in management schemes | Research organisations; EGMP | Mitigation |
| Collect and share data on actual yield losses using standard methodologies | Agricultural authorities; research organisations; EGMP | Mitigation |
| Promote long-term monitoring of the condition of natural habitats used by geese at all times of the year | Research organisations; EGMP | |
|
| ||
| Review which elements (including socio-economic factors) result in successful measures to prevent/reduce crop damage, especially over multiple years at the same locations | Research organisations | Knowledge |
| Regularly collate and exchange experience, information and case-studies from different countries including especially examples of failed or ineffective measures, and any cross-border cooperative initiatives | Research organisations; national authorities; EGMP | |
| Critically review and reconsider those mitigation methods which provide alternative food sources (including sacrificial crops) which then contribute to further population growth | Management authorities; research organisations | |
| Undertake research on how to make natural habitats more attractive | Management authorities; research organisations | Knowledge |
| Further develop effective scaring tools including those which result in the aversive conditioning of geese | Research organisations | Knowledge |
| ‘Re-package’ and make more accessible the considerable existing guidance which exists on damage limitation techniques | Management authorities; research organisations | |
|
| ||
| Promote better engagement with the hunting community, especially the critical need to report, collate and disseminate bag data at all scales (local, national, international), targeting especially those countries where bag data do not exist, or is not readily accessible | National authorities responsible for hunting regulation; hunting organisations; EGMP | Knowledge, Stakeholders |
| Implement and learn from further examples of practical adaptive management and use this experience to optimise adaptive harvest models | EGMP; national authorities | Knowledge |
| Review national legislation in relevant countries to ensure its suitability for potential adaptive management processes | National authorities | |
| Harmonise legal frameworks for the control and management of non-native goose species | National governments | |
|
| ||
| Better manage and interact with senior decision makers and politicians to ensure they are asking the right questions, understand the options (including risks and consequences of adaptive management), and have the right information to arrive at decisions | Governmental administrations at all scales; stakeholders | Stakeholders |
| Make more widely available basic conflict resolution tools and skills with training for conservation professionals and others involved in conflict situations | National conservation agencies and others | |
| Frequently disseminate relevant information to the public and other stakeholders at multiple scales (international to local) | National conservation agencies; EGMP | |
| Remove perverse incentives acting against sustainable solutions and replace with incentives appropriately targeted at farmers, hunters and conservation organisations that are mutually supportive | National and regional governments as appropriate | |
| Produce accessible guidance about the full range of management options related to resolving goose conflicts, and disseminate to policy makers and other stakeholders | National authorities; EGMP; EC | |
|
| ||
| Develop and implement flyway-level management plans for relevant populations, based on adaptive management principles, that include: | National governments; EGMP**; EC and Member States; research organisations and other stakeholders | |
| Establish a better high-level European political vision for goose conservation and management that supports flyway management plans | National governments; EGMP**; EC | Mitigation; Stakeholders; Control |
| Promote better networking by communicating ‘who does what’ in each country through web-based platforms | EGMP** | |
| Clarify relationships and the decision-making autonomy between management authorities where, within a country (and especially for those with federal governance), multiple agencies have responsibility for different aspects of goose conservation and management | National authorities at all scales of government | |
| Produce an overview of the different national policies for compensation and hunting legislation to facilitate development of adaptive management processes | National governments and EGMP | Control |
| Consider options to revise the EU Birds Directive’s Annex II list of quarry species to aid adaptive management of relevant geese | EC with EU Member States | |
| Elaborate further existing guidance regarding the interpretation of Article 9 of the Birds Directive (European Commission | EC | Control |
| Ensure management of ‘overabundant’ geese does not jeopardise the current favourable conservation status of species concerned, and clarify and agree biologically ‘safe’ population sizes (that accord with favourable conservation status) at national and flyway scales as well as within EU and relevant national legal contexts | National governments; EC and Member States; scientific stakeholders including EGMP | Control |