4.7 Article

COVID19-induced reduction in human disturbance enhances fattening of an overabundant goose species

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 255, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2021.108968

Keywords

COVID19 lockdown; Hunting; Disturbance; Body condition; Snow geese; Habitat use

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada [RGPIN2019-05185]
  2. Fonds de recherche du Quebec Nature et Technologies [271544]
  3. Sentinelle Nord program from the Canada First Research Excellence Fund
  4. Network of Centre of Excellence of Canada (ArcticNET) [PP12]

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The study found that the lockdown in 2020, due to the COVID19 pandemic, resulted in a significant reduction in hunting activity, leading to better body condition of greater snow geese compared to previous years. However, they reached peak body condition earlier than in other years and spent less time feeding in agricultural habitats in late spring. This suggests that hunting-related disturbances may have a negative impact on the foraging efficiency and body condition of geese.
Overabundant species can have major impacts on their habitat and induce trophic cascades within ecosystems. In North America, the overabundant greater snow goose (Anser caerulescens atlanticus) has been successfully controlled through special spring hunting regulations since 1999. Hunting is a source of mortality but also of disturbance, which affects the behavior and nutrient storage dynamics of staging snow geese. In 2020, the lockdown imposed by the COVID19 pandemic reduced hunting activity during their migratory stopover in Que?bec by at least 31%. This provided a unique opportunity to assess the effects of a sudden reduction in hunting disturbance on geese. We used long-term data on body mass combined with movement data from GPS-tracked birds in 2019 and 2020 to assess the effects of the 2020 lockdown on the spring body condition and behavior of greater snow geese. Body condition was higher in 2020 than in all years since the inception of spring hunting in 1999, except for 2019. However, in 2020 geese reached maximal body condition earlier during the staging period than in any other year and reduced by half time spent feeding in highly profitable but risky agricultural habitat in late spring compared to 2019. Although our study was not designed to evaluate the effects of the lockdown, the associated reduction in disturbance in 2020 supports the hypothesis that hunting-related disturbance negatively affects foraging efficiency and body condition in geese. Since spring body condition is related to subsequent breeding success, the lockdown could increase productivity in this overabundant population.

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