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Park officials: We’ll save geese this time

The Brooklyn Paper

The goose population of Prospect Park has mostly rebounded from a federal massacre earlier this summer — but park officials now say they’ll control the bird’s numbers to avoid another feathery mass murder.

A committee of park administrators, birders, academics, environmentalists and Councilman Brad Lander (D–Park Slope) convened last month as part of a multi-faceted, long-term approach to controlling the bird population.

“We want to keep their numbers low enough so the feds don’t have to come back,” said Eugene Patron, a spokesman for Prospect Park.

The group convened under the behest of Tupper Thomas, the head of Prospect Park, who herself was opposed to the waterfowl wetworks, though she never spoke out against it. (See main story.)

To obviate a return visit by federal slaughterers, the committee will issue recommendations by the end of the year — and a first recommendation has already been put in place: signs discouraging parkgoers from feeding the birds.

It was only two months ago that agents from Wildlife Services, a division of the federal Department of Agriculture, entered Prospect Park under cover of darkness and corralled some 290 geese and their baby goslings. The agents then threw the birds in a gas chamber — a move that shocked the borough and reverberated throughout the nation.

Federal, city and state officials said the mass culling was necessary to ensure airline safety and prevent a disaster similar to the so-called Miracle on the Hudson, in which an airplane crash-landed on the Hudson River after colliding with a flock of geese in midair.

That justification was met with broad skepticism from environmentalists, as well as the various parties who attended last week’s meeting of the Wildlife Management Advisory Committee.

“[The culling] was hard to justify from their point of view,” said Patron, who hastened to add there were no aviation experts on the panel.

The committee will likely examine the destruction of goose eggs, called “egg addling,” as a humane method to control the geese population.

According to our own tally, the geese population has already passed 130 — up from the single digits in July.

Patron said that an education outreach program focused on the problems caused by feeding waterfowl would likely be a component of any recommendations by the committee as well.

The committee will convene one more time and then make a presentation to the public sometime before the end of the year, Patron said.

“We can’t guarantee the feds won’t come again,” he added, “but we got to do what we can.”

Reader Feedback

Mary Beth from Windsor Terrace says:
Education and respect are key. Let's teach the community about all the wonderful qualities of these majestic birds- I highly recommend reading "Lessons of the Geese".

We need to respect ALL wildlife that inhabit the park and while we are at it be mindful of what we leave behind- trash, fishing lines, plastic bags, etc. We are so incredibly fortunate to have a beautiful space with incredible wildlife.

There is alot of work to be done, but it CAN be done.

Let's do the right thing this time.

Oct. 5, 2010, 9:24 am
judy starr from nyc says:
If men can build planes & fly ~~~ We certainly can create a barrier that blocks any debris from getting into the engines of planes .
We need to work with nature not fight against it by destroying our most precious treasures !
The ones that taught us how to fly !
Oct. 5, 2010, 11:07 am
tastyjon from park slope says:
For some reason, duck is top protein in many countries. Peking duck is the top dish in China and the quackery fowl is fave in Europe.

I'm not sure why goose hasn't earned the same esteem. That said, goose liver pate is a global top dish.

Maybe we can get some top chefs to open a place adjacent to the park and turn a difficult situation into a tasty one.
Oct. 5, 2010, 11:17 pm
patrice from fort greene says:
truly dumb ass response tasty jon!
Oct. 5, 2010, 11:21 pm
PattyA from Manhattan says:
Perhaps we should donate the remains of the gassed PP geese to "tastyjon" -- that is, if we can find them in the "undisclosed landfill."

Considering that the birds contain large amounts of mercury and lead in their systems, we would have to caution Mr. tastyjon to "eat at your own peril." We don't after all, want to get sued from Mr. tastyjon's widow.

On the serious side, the "Do Not Feed" signs will have NO impact upon goose populations. Canada geese are not dependent upon humans for food. Their instints to migrate (if only across the park) are stronger than any hankerings for bread or treats.

All the "Do Not Feed" signs "accomplish" is to take away this positive connection to animals from children and replace it instead with the tendancy to throw rocks and sticks at the animals.

Not good for either the children OR the animals over the long haul.
Oct. 6, 2010, 6:20 am

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