Geese Removal: Dog Service, Egg Addling & More

Dog Service

Dog Service

Egg Depredation

Egg Depredation

Flight Control Plus

Flight Control® Plus

More About Canada Geese

APPEARANCE

Large with long neck and a flat bill. Head and neck are black with white cheeks and chinstrap, brown back, and tan chest.

BEHAVIOR

Social, often in large flocks with many of the members related to each other. Pairs will stay together throughout the year, and young often stay with parents for a year. Pairs separate and fights will occur when breeding season starts.

DIET

Almost all plant material, mostly stems/shoots of grasses and seeds/berries. They enjoy cultivated grains and will occasionally eat insects, mollusks, crustaceans, or small fish.

HABITAT

Lakes, ponds, bays, marshes, fields. Diverse but nests are always near water. They often feed in open areas.

NESTING

May mate for life, male will defend territory with displays including hissing, lowering head to ground with bill raised, and pumping head up and down while standing. Nest usually on slightly elevated dry ground with good visibility, location will vary. A female typically lays 4-7 eggs with only one brood per season.

MIGRATION

Resident and migratory populations exist. Many will winter more south and return in spring, migrating as a loose aggregate of multiple family groups as well as individuals. Typically, migrating starts at dusk.

ISSUES CAUSED BY CANADA GEESE

High densities of Canada geese in metropolitan environments have created numerous nuisance and public health problems such as:

  • Unnecessary cleaning from the goose droppings left behind on properties
  • Reduction in property values and curb appeal
  • Algal blooms caused by excessive amounts of goose feces
  • Injuries caused by aggressive geese during nesting season
  • Increase in aircraft collisions

HOW TO MANAGE ISSUES WITH CANADA GEESE:

  • No feeding ordinances and signage
  • Habitat modification such as allowing grass to grow and/or plant buffer strips of natural grasses to block the geese’s view of potential predators, and using fence barriers between the geese and nearby water to prevent ease of movement
  • Scare devices such as trained dogs, auditory calls, predator effigies, mylar flagging, pyrotechnics, and/or human harassment
  • Chemical repellents, such as Flight Control® Plus
  • Egg depredation

Sources: The Audubon Society, Cornell Lab of Ornithology bird guide, Humane Society of the United States, Internet Center for Wildlife Damage Management

 

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