The Snow Goose Population Problem
Part II
Working Toward a Solution

By Mike Johnson
Game and Fish Migratory Game Bird Management Supervisor

North Dakota Outdoors - September/October 1966


Editor's note: Last month, Part I of this story dealt with the developing ecological crisis relating to the overpopulation of snow geese. We looked at the reasons for the continuing population increase, and how that population is af ecting fragile arctic nesting grounds. This month, we look at what is being done, and what can be done, to solve the problem.

Migratory game birds are an international treasure. The past 100 years have produced heroic efforts to protect and increase numbers of ducks, geese, swans and other migratory game birds.

We have negotiated and amended international treaties, enacted countless congressional and parliamentary acts, and state and local laws and regulations. We have created refuges, purchased and leased land, planted cover and food crops, fought diseases, pesticides and toxicants, battled habitat destruction and degradation, regulated and restricted hunting in every conceivable fashion, all for the sole purpose of maintaining and increasing populations of migratory birds, especially waterfowl.

State, provincial, territorial, national and native people governments, private organizations, citizens and hunters have worked tirelessly to raise money and implement these actions. No other resource issue in the world has received more attention than the conservation of Western Hemisphere waterfowl.

Now, for the first time, we are faced with a serious overabundance of an international waterfowl population - snow geese.

The population objective for the MidContinent Population is 1 - 1.5 million birds as measured by the mid-December survey. The 1994 inventory was 2.7 million birds and was only slightly lower in 1995. The actual population may be two to three times larger than indicated by the mid-December index.

This large and growing snow goose population presents a serious problem for which we have no history or experience to guide our way. Biologists, managers, administrators and elected officials must now deal with a situation that contradicts generations of effort dedicated to building and maintaining populations.

What has been done?
What can be done?

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More about Snow Geese in North Dakota

1992 North Dakota Outdoors Discussion of Snow Geese Problem