Close X
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nanaimo, B.C., mulls solution to damage caused by huge flocks of Canada geese

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2017 10:30 AM
  • Nanaimo, B.C., mulls solution to damage caused by huge flocks of Canada geese

Huge flocks of Canada geese can be unwanted pests in any location, but several Vancouver Island cities say the geese have moved past messy and aggressive and are harming the environment.

Nanaimo, B.C., environmental protection officer Kevin Brydges says Canada geese were brought to the island for hunting in the 1970s and 1980s and have adapted so well that they no longer migrate in winter.

Researchers at Vancouver Island University say as many as 1,800 birds overwinter in Nanaimo, leaving droppings and eating through grasses vital to the health of river estuaries.

Confirmation of the size of the Nanaimo flock will help the city decide on a management strategy, which Brydges says may include population control similar to a cull carried out in the nearby City of Parksville last year.

Tim Clermont, with Guardians of Mid-Island Estuaries, says before the Parksville cull, the geese had eaten almost 80 per cent of estuary grasses and destroyed shelter for migrating salmon.

"They affect tourism when people come here to enjoy our beaches. And when you have lots of geese, sometimes they've had to close beaches," Clermont says.

But Brydges, who is part of a group seeking a unified approach to the problem, predicts if Canada geese are removed from one area, birds from other areas will come in to fill the void.

Brydges says a cull has not been proposed in Nanaimo but could be considered, and relocation is an option but there are rules about relocating geese.

"And, to be honest, you're basically moving the problem from one place to another. These geese are smart, they're habituated and they will find their way back," he says. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Chief Calls To End Moose Hunt In B.C. Following Wildfires, Habitat Loss

WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — A First Nations chief is calling on the British Columbia government to halt the moose hunt this year, arguing the historic wildfire season has caused enough trauma to the species.

Chief Calls To End Moose Hunt In B.C. Following Wildfires, Habitat Loss

University Of British Columbia Faces New Sexual Assault Human-Rights Complaint

University Of British Columbia Faces New Sexual Assault Human-Rights Complaint
VANCOUVER — Stephanie Hale remembers jumping up and down and crying tears of joy when she received her acceptance letter from the University of British Columbia.

University Of British Columbia Faces New Sexual Assault Human-Rights Complaint

B.C.'s Only Support Group For HIV-Positive Women Closes After Funding Cuts

B.C.'s Only Support Group For HIV-Positive Women Closes After Funding Cuts
She was addicted to drugs and sleeping in decrepit hotels in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside when she was diagnosed with HIV about 13 years ago. She assumed it was a death sentence.

B.C.'s Only Support Group For HIV-Positive Women Closes After Funding Cuts

Former New Zealand Councillor Found Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In B.C.

Former New Zealand Councillor Found Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In B.C.
Peter Beckett had pleaded not-guilty to first-degree murder in the death of his wife, Laura Letts-Beckett, who drowned in a lake near Revelstoke, B.C., in August 2010.

Former New Zealand Councillor Found Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In B.C.

Man Dead In Early Morning Shooting In Richmond

An RCMP news release says officers were called to a residential neighbourhood just after 3 a.m. to find the critically injured man, who could not be revived.

Man Dead In Early Morning Shooting In Richmond

Meet DARPAN Extraordinary Achievements Award Winners 2017

Meet DARPAN Extraordinary Achievements Award Winners 2017
DARPAN Magazine, hosted its 8th Annual Awards in the company of esteemed social, business and political elites. This spectacular red carpet event took place at Aria Convention Centre in Surrey on September 15.

Meet DARPAN Extraordinary Achievements Award Winners 2017