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Author Topic: Hundreds of geese euthanized near NYC airports  (Read 5580 times)
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Kris G.
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« on: 13-Jul-10, 02:58:25 PM »

Hundreds of geese euthanized near NYC airports

July 13, 2010 12:17 AM

NEW YORK -- Officials say hundreds of geese located near New York City airports have been euthanized in the past several weeks.

Carol Bannerman, spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Services, said Monday the department was asked to remove Canada geese from more than a dozen locations within seven miles of city airports.

Bannerman said nearly 400 geese were corralled at Prospect Park in Brooklyn on Thursday and euthanized using carbon dioxide. She said the geese are removed because they are a risk to planes.

In January, 2009, Captain Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger safely glided a US Airways jet into the Hudson River after its engines failed when the plane struck a flock of geese.

Bannerman said approximately 1,200 geese were removed last summer and the department planned to remove about the same amount this year.


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jeanne
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« Reply #1 on: 13-Jul-10, 03:16:36 PM »

I know geese are problematic but sheesh.  Are there no natural predators that could be introduced?
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« Reply #2 on: 13-Jul-10, 03:19:12 PM »

Huh?  confused  I grew up in Brooklyn.  Prospect Park is not even maybe close to any NYC airport.  Smoke screen, if you ask me!
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Kris G.
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« Reply #3 on: 13-Jul-10, 03:27:10 PM »

I know geese are problematic but sheesh.  Are there no natural predators that could be introduced?

I know, Jeanne.  I felt bad too.
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janethowland
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« Reply #4 on: 13-Jul-10, 05:48:44 PM »

Is this what happened to all the geese that used to be around Marketplace Mall in Henrietta?  I've always wondered what happened to them and suspected they may have been euthanized in some way.
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Kris G.
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« Reply #5 on: 13-Jul-10, 06:15:23 PM »

Is this what happened to all the geese that used to be around Marketplace Mall in Henrietta?  I've always wondered what happened to them and suspected they may have been euthanized in some way.

There's a few down in the Target-Lowe's area but all the geese that used to be around on the lawn by the Marketplace sign aren't there anymore.  Does make you wonder...
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jeanne
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« Reply #6 on: 13-Jul-10, 06:16:32 PM »

I haven't been by there in awhile.  It's unusual for geese to not be there.  Hmmm
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« Reply #7 on: 14-Jul-10, 02:44:52 PM »

I haven't been by there in awhile.  It's unusual for geese to not be there.  Hmmm

We went to Henrietta this AM and today we saw a lot of geese.  There were about 20 walking through the parking lot in front of Penney's heading for the lawn on Jefferson and there were dozens in the pond and the surrounding lawn in front of Macy's.
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« Reply #8 on: 14-Jul-10, 08:48:08 PM »

Huh??  1200 geese is a drop in the bucket.  Sounds like locals wanted a clean place to walk in the park.  My feral pigeon population is way down this year, but we think we have a new peregrine pair and we know we have more sharp shinned and cooper's hawks.
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« Reply #9 on: 16-Jul-10, 10:54:43 PM »

Air Rights -- To Die For?



Federal agents swooped down on Prospect Park last week, removing hundreds of Canada geese and gassing them. The U.S. Department of Agriculture said the culling was necessary to protect air travelers. Others dispute that claim.

The best introduction to the story is an article by Isolde Raftery that began on page A1 of Tuesday's Times and jumped to A22. The apt headline was "400 PARK GEESE DIE, FOR HUMAN FLIERS' SAKE". The story is really well written, and we suggest you click here to read it if you are interested. We appreciate the attention the Times gave to the subject.

A criticism of the story came from the New York City Audubon Society, whose position was described by the Times as "cautiously supportive of the mass euthanizing." In a later statement, the Audubon Society took issue with the Times' description of "NYC Audubon's position on culling resident Canada geese within the five boroughs." They now say:

    NYC Audubon believes that lethal control should be the last resort after all other methods for managing bird populations have been exhausted. The blanket approach of lethal control will not significantly reduce the risk birds pose to aviation safety. We maintain that City officials should reduce the amount of lush, green lawn space available throughout the city, which attracts geese. Without such measures, new geese will take up residence here and populations will quickly rebound to current levels. The City may also limit growth of the resident geese population through egg-addling or nest destruction.

    NYC Audubon also takes issue with the target population size identified by the Department of Agriculture, which calls for reducing the number of Canada geese in the city by 80 percent. This figure is not supported by sound scientific research. The recent cull at Prospect Park included nearly 100 percent of the geese in that area; essentially, this population was 'managed' into extinction. NYC Audubon strongly disagrees with that decision.

    When one species becomes so abundant that it has a negative impact on the habitat and resources of other native bird species - as may be the case with Canada geese - NYC Audubon, like most Audubon chapters, supports population management. But the option of lethal control should be a last resort, undertaken only when bird populations threaten the health, safety, and welfare of other wildlife and humans, and only after a rigorous environmental impact assessment has been done and full disclosure has been made to local citizens and other stakeholders.

Our view of the problem is that important issues have not been answered satisfactorily, and that we lack confidence in the process employed to reach specific decisions on the use of deadly force on animal families.

In fact, Canada geese are often a nuisance in many more ways than causing airplanes to crash, which is very rare. Their droppings litter golf courses and meadows. They eat shoots and small plants, depriving other species of nourishment. They are highly territorial, and hiss and bite when they believe they are intruded upon. Originally migratory birds flying long distances in the spring and fall, many have evolved into permanent residents of local open spaces. They hang around all year instead of flying south in the winter. They can overwhelm ducks, which are smaller waterfowl.

On the other hand, even unpleasant creatures do not deserve the Federal gas chamber to which they have been consigned, in some cases with a degree of arbitrariness. The government's declaration that geese must be killed if they are within seven miles of an airport, considering that Prospect Park is 6.5 miles from both LaGuardia and Kennedy, has the flavor of contrivance. Do the Feds mean to tell us that if the distance had been 7.2 miles, say, the geese and their goslings would have been spared?

The January 2009 collision with Captain Sullenberger's airplane was said to have been caused by migratory geese, not their cousins who amuse Brooklynites at Prospect Park. We think that in cases of capital punishment, the burden of proof is on the executioners. Of course, if human life is actually threatened by the geese, we side with our own species. But we are aware that government programs, once under way, are difficult to limit or restrain, unless there is a powerful lobby representing the other side. In this case, there is no economic interest in the survival of Canada geese, and there is no spokesgoose to represent them.

Another concern is the lack of public discussion on this issue. The searchlight has certainly not reached this government program. We do not recall any opportunity for local input, on either side. It is necessary to protect air travel, but where is the evidence that the indiscriminate slaughter of non-migratory geese is the best way to accomplish that goal? Perhaps the Feds do it because the non-migrants are easier to find and poison. You get better statistics that way.

Part of this outcry is an increasing lack of confidence in the authorities. One need not be a Tea Party ideologue to question the bureaucracy. It would be reassuring to see the science behind the kill. We have heard that the Interior Department originally declined to do the dirty work, so it was shifted to Agriculture, which had no qualms about the work. Perhaps there should be a Federal Bureau of Extermination to organize activities of this nature.

Another suggestion that has been made is that, if this program is to be continued, the geese should be fed to the poor, rather than dumped in a landfill, as was the case with the Prospect Park 400 (or 368, as we have been told). But the policy of providing free or low-cost food might lead to increasing the numbers of poor people, which is not on the Federal agenda.
 

Follow Henry J. Stern on Twitter: www.twitter.com/newyorkcivic
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« Reply #10 on: 18-Jul-10, 06:23:22 AM »

MOUNT LAUREL — Animal rights activists and township officials alike are expressing outrage over a deadly attack on a flock of Canada geese here.

Authorities discovered over the weekend that about 18 Canada geese and wild ducks were slaughtered at a retention pond at the East Gate Square shopping center off Nixon Drive.

Many of the birds appeared to have been beaten and shot in the head, said Mount Laurel Police Chief Dennis Cribben Jr. Mayor Jim Keenan called the attack "disgusting."

"It's a horrendous act against the animals," he said Tuesday. "We don't condone something like that."
Related

In what officials say may have been a separate incident, five more geese were found dead at the retention pond Monday. Those birds showed no signs of abuse and may have died from botulism, said Bob Gogats, a Burlington County health officer.

Moorestown resident Chris Cramer said he discovered the slaughtered geese Sunday on his way to an area store. It appeared many of the geese were chased from a fenced-in retention pond into an adjoining parking lot, where they were killed.

Cramer said he took three injured geese in his car to a wildlife refuge in Medford.

While the birds' presence may be seen as a nuisance for some, Cribben said it is illegal for residents to take matters into their hands. Anyone charged with killing the geese faces a third-degree cruelty to animals charge, a penalty of up to $15,000 in fines and three to five years' imprisonment.

The incident comes on the heels of a controversial move last month, when about 133 Canada geese were euthanized in a township park with the approval of Keenan and township council.

Township officials said the decision to kill the geese at Laurel Acres Park was recommended by a U.S. Department of Agriculture team hired by the township to address repeated complaints about the birds.

The federal team previously had taken steps such as addling geese eggs so they would not hatch.

The gassing of the geese sparked a protest from animal rights activists earlier this month. The discovery of the dead geese Sunday brought some of those people back before township council on Monday night.

"It was an act of brutal animal cruelty," said township resident Tina Wilson in an interview Tuesday.

Wilson said she and others presented nonlethal methods for controlling geese populations to council members Monday. Wilson said animal rights activists fear the weekend's killing of geese may have been some type of response to the group's protest earlier this month.

Reach George Mast at (856) 486-2465 at gmast@camden.gannett.com

This is just not right...people are getting the wrong idea. It's not a free for all.
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