| Literature DB >> 28215019 |
Abstract
This paper reviews the changing status of goose populations in Scotland since the 1940s, and the changing policies and management activities employed over that time. The size of all goose populations has risen since the 1940s due to protection measures, changes in agriculture and levels of shooting, in the UK and elsewhere. The development of goose policies in response to public interest and pressures is described. Some changes in goose populations since 2000 can be linked to this policy development. Policy is now split between protective measures for some species and adaptive management approaches encompassing control measures for others. The paper identifies the importance of the social and economic concerns of some parties in the development of goose management approaches, rather than scientific advice based on goose population numbers and trends, and recognises that future goose policy will necessarily be a difficult compromise between wide ranging, and even opposing positions and views.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive management; Goose populations; Wildlife policy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28215019 PMCID: PMC5316324 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-016-0883-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Changes in Scottish Goose population abundance, 1948–2015
| Population | ca. 1950 numbers | ca. 2000 numbers | ca. 2015 numbers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Svalbard barnacle goose | 300 (1948) | 24 000 (1999) | 38 100 (2013/2014) |
| Greenland barnacle goose | 8080 (1959) | 53 823 (1999) | 80 670 (2013) |
| Greenland white-fronted goose | 3000-4000 (1950s) | 21 997 (1999) | 8558 (2015) |
| Pink-footed goose | 49 700 (1957) | 245 349 (2000/01) | 393 170 (2015) |
| Icelandic greylag goose | 25 000 (1952) | 80 324 (2000/2001) | 89 668 (2015) |
| Scottish native greylag goose | 100 pairs? (1950s) | 10 000 (1997) | 46 400 (2015) |
| Reintroduced greylag goose | 2000? (1950s) | 2673 (1991) | 12 895 (2008/2009) |
| Taiga Bean goose | 200 (1952) | 180 (2000/01) | 231 (2014) |
| Light-bellied Brent goose | 0? (1950s) | 5–10 (2000) | 140 (2015) |
| Canada Goose | 119–194 (1953) | 1244 (2000) | 3000+? (2015) |
| Snow Goose | Introduced to Mull | 34 (2002) | 20–40 (2014) |
Sources ca. 1950s Boyd (1963), Ogilvie (1969), Kirby et al. (1999); ca. 2000 summary from Crabtree et al. (2010), Scottish Bird reports on line, Fox and Francis (1999); ca. 2015: summary from Cohen (2015), Fox et al. (2015)
Comparisons between goose populations in Scotland and their management
|
|
|
| Static numbers: ca. 37 000 | Rising numbers: ca. 37 000 |
| Large management payments | Modest management payments |
| Feeding scheme | Feeding scheme |
| Move to adaptive management | No shooting agreed by local scheme |
| Shooting controls | Small political activity |
| Strong political activity |
|
|
| Rising numbers: ca. 390 000 |
| Static numbers: ca. 90 000 | Highly mobile, daily and seasonally |
| Concentrated geographically on Orkney | Very small payment scheme - Strathbeg |
| No payment schemes | Almost no political activity |
| Modest (increasing) political activity | Open season shooting |
| Open season shooting |
|
|
| Rising numbers: 30 000? |
| Rising numbers: ca. 40 000 | Widespread, locally very numerous |
| Concentrated geographically | No payments |
| Small payments for shooting schemes | Almost no political activity |
| Strong political activity | No management |
| Four local Adaptive Management Pilot schemes | Open season shooting |
| Shooting controls and open season shooting |