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APPENDIX A <br />PROPOSAL <br />Title: Canada Goose Population Management and Ecology. <br />Prepared by: Dr. lames A. Cooper, Associate Professor, Department of <br />Fisheries and Wildlife, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN. (612- <br />624 -1223) <br />Importance: . <br />Extirpated by, market and subsistence hunting over much of its <br />southern range during settlement, the Canada goose {Branca canadensis} <br />has been reestablished in the midwest, and elsewhere. This. successful <br />wildlife management program resulted from. federal, state, and private <br />efforts (Nelson 1963, Dill and Lee 1970, and Cooper 1978 ). <br />Contemporary landscaping and farming practices have greatly <br />enhanced Canada goose habitat. Lawns, soybeans, small grains, and <br />pasture sown on lake and wetland shorelines provide a super abundance <br />of brood - rearing habitat in both rural and urban settings. These sites and <br />harvested agricultural crops, especially corn and , small grains, are used at <br />other times of the year. This, coupled with refuges created to protect the <br />birds during establishment and the expansion of cities where hunting is <br />not permitted, has lead to a phenomenal population growth in past 20 <br />years. <br />Because Canada geese are highly social and occur in flocks during all <br />periods of the year except nesting (Zicus 1981; Schultz 1983) and graze <br />extensively on grasses, forbs, and crops, goose flocks, particularly adults <br />with flightless young, began to damage Minnesota crops in 1980 (Rose <br />198I). Concentrations of geese and their droppings in city parks, on golf <br />courses, and goose flights near airports have lead to a growing number of <br />complaints in urbanized areas, e. g., Denver, Minneapolis -St. Paul, T <br />Boston, and Westchester County in New York (Laycock 1982, betting 1983). <br />While population. reductions methods, such as capture and removal and <br />increased hunting kill, have been used, none have be, adequately tested or <br />documented in the literature. This project will test further removal and <br />translocation. <br />