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Population dynamics of North American light-bellied brent geese as determined by productivity and harvest surveys

January 1, 1985

Midwinter inventories of total numbers, population-age ratios in the autumn, and estimates of the total numbers of and age ratios in hunter-killed birds were used to develop a population budget for Atlantic Brant - Lightbellied Brent Geese - Branta bernicla hrota for the period 1968-84. Substantial fluctuations in productivity and survival occurred even in the absence of hunting seasons for 9 of the 17 years. Annual survival estimates ranged from 0.41 to 0.97 for birds> I year of age; mean annual survival for the 17-year period was 0.77, little different from an estimate of 0.78 recently obtained from ringing records. This summary confirms high adult survival for Atlantic Brant as in other long-lived birds with delayed sexual maturity and irregulur breeding failure. The combinution of these factors results in unequal age-cohort representation from year to year. Population size alone, therefore. is not an indicator of population resilience. Proper management should aim to maintain Atlantic Brant at a level sufficient to rebound from sequential breeding and wintering failure. We propose management by age-cohort as the best scheme for tbese geese.

Publication Year 1985
Title Population dynamics of North American light-bellied brent geese as determined by productivity and harvest surveys
Authors R.E. Kirby, T.W. Barry, R.H. Kerbes, H.H. Obrecht
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Wildfowl
Index ID 5222015
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center