LIGHT GOOSE
POPULATION REDUCTION PROGRAM
By Guy Zenner, Waterfowl
Research Biologist
In an effort to reduce
the size of the mid-continent light goose population and halt the widening
destruction of fragile arctic habitats, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
(Service) recently published two rules that affect light goose hunting
this spring throughout the Midwest. Promulgation of these rules was
a direct result of the passage of the Arctic Tundra Habitat Emergency Conservation
Act by Congress in November 1999. This act gave the Service authority
to take appropriate actions to reduce the mid-continent light goose population
while completing an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) to address possible
impacts of this program and assess long-term strategies for population
management.
The new conservation order
reinstates interim population control measures that were first adopted
in February 1999 but were withdrawn in May after a legal challenge.
The Humane Society of the U.S., in conjunction with several other animal
rights groups, successfully used the court system and the National Environmental
Protection Act to get the Service to withdraw its rules for taking light
geese in May 1999. The Service had prepared an Environmental Assessment
(EA) before publishing its rules in February 1999, but the Humane Society
argued, and the court agreed, that the Service should have prepared a full-blown
EIS. The Service had been pressured by many conservation organizations
across the continent to take immediate action to reduce the mid-continent
light goose population. In response to these calls for action, the
Service prepared an EA so that some actions could be initiated to reduce
the mid-continent light goose population while the EIS was being prepared,
a process that usually takes 2 years.
Concerned that the length
of the EIS process would leave the Service and state wildlife agencies
without the ability to take action next spring, Rep. Jim Saxton, R-N.J.,
chairman of the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries and Wildlife,
introduced legislation in July that reinstated the rules. The legislation
gives states the ability to take measures to reduce light goose populations
pending completion of the EIS, thus preventing a delay that only compounds
the problem. The legislation was approved by Congress on Nov. 10, and signed
by President Clinton on Nov. 24, 1999.
The Service has since
begun work on an EIS that will determine its long-term management strategy
for overabundant lesser snow and Ross' geese populations, as well as the
rapidly increasing greater snow goose population. A draft EIS is expected
to be completed in the Spring of 2000, with a final EIS anticipated in
2001.
For additional information
regarding efforts to curb the growth of mid-continent light goose populations
visit the USFWS site by clicking this link.
Snow
Goose information from the USFWS
Back to
Top |