Recovery of the Aleutian Cackling Goose Branta hutchinsii leucopareia: 10-year review and future prospects

Anne E Mini, Dominic C Bachman, Josh Cocke, Kenneth M Griggs, Kyle A Spragens, Jeffrey M Black

Abstract


Aleutian Cackling Geese Branta hutchinsii leucopareiawere feared extinct until a remnant
population was discovered on Buldir Island by Robert “Sea Otter” Jones in 1962.
Population declines, primarily due to predation by Arctic Foxes Alopex lagopus
introduced to the breeding islands, resulted in the listing of Aleutian Cackling Geese
as endangered in 1967. Fox removal, translocation of captive birds and captive
breeding programmes boosted the remarkable recovery of this sub-species from 790
individuals in 1967 to > 30,000 in 2001, when it was removed from the United States’
Endangered Species List. Population estimates currently exceed 100,000 birds.
However, the population recovery has brought complex management issues,
including the harvest of a once-endangered sub-species and conflict with agricultural
interests. This review comes 50 years following rediscovery of the remnant
population, 20 years after initial reclassification from endangered to threatened, and
10 years after formal delisting from the United States’ Endangered Species Act. This
review describes the events leading up to the bird’s recovery, details management
actions taken on behalf of the sub-species, and recommends strategies for ensuring
that this conservation success story continues into the future.


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