Wild Goose Chase
How one man's obsession saved an "extinct" species
- By Rob R. Dunn
- Smithsonian.com, January 02, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
There are just a handful of success stories in conservation. These stories often share two attributes: the problem the species faces is understood and fixable, and some individual human is dedicated beyond reason to the rescue of the species. For the Aleutian cackling geese, the problem was the fox and the human was Jones.
The world has many rare and dwindling species. There will be other conservation crises in the islands. Some seabirds are declining mysteriously. Numbers of cormorants, Larus gulls, pigeon guillemots, horned puffins and black-legged kittiwakes have all decreased since the early 1980s. Nor, unfortunately, are the species of the Aleutian Islands unique in this regard. Some declining species have champions (see, for example, the Oregon and California and then each summer they head home again to the islands. There, in the Aleutians, eggs hatch into goslings, goslings learn to fly, and as winter comes they all take off, cackling, and announcing their place, as Mary Oliver has written, in the family of things.
Rob Dunn is a biologist at North Carolina State University. His book "Every Living Thing: Man's Obsessive Quest to Catalog Life, from Nanobacteria to New Monkeys" comes out in January. Find more on Dunn's work at http://www4.ncsu.edu/~rrdunn/.
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Comments (157)
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Interesting !!!
Posted by Jim Jones on April 16,2009 | 05:10 PM
The fox was introduced onto the islands. They were not in their natural habitat. In their natural habitat there was a balance of predators. The so called reintroduction of the wolf is actually a new species of wolf from Alaska. The original wolf was much smaller and not as aggressive as the Alaska wolf. The transplanted wolf is killing the new born calves of deer, elk, and moose. The populations are being decimated. These wolves are breaching the caves of hibernating bears and are killing the mother and her cubs.
Posted by Barbara on February 12,2009 | 04:25 PM
It is very comforting to know that there are still people who care for the preservation of the creatures of nature. I love the geese, I love the foxes and I love the wolves they are all creatures made by the same God Who createded all living beeings.
Posted by Benedito S. Guedes de Azevedo on January 26,2009 | 09:30 AM
I wish it were a requirement that posters first at least perfunctorily read the article before posting knee-jerk responses. Firstly, the article did NOT say the geese were extinct; they were THOUGHT extinct. Secondly, Jones was NOT upsetting a natural balance; he was restoring it by removing foxes introduced by fur trappers. On to my own response: we enjoy the Aleutians during their migrations across our skies, and I never had any idea they were once endangered. A local team fundraising for a children's museum once dressed in Aleutian geese costumes! (The annual fundraising event involves leaping into our frigid bay in January or February.) We cherish their beauty and their song. At times our farmers complain that the geese temporarily compete with cattle for grass, but no one proposes harming them. Hats off to Jones and to those who follow in his footsteps!
Posted by Anpo Wi on January 25,2009 | 11:20 AM
An excellent article. Thanks to Rob Dunn and kudos to Bob Jones. At this time of year I see these birds by the tens of thousands every day around Humboldt Bay on California's North Coast. There are so many that they are competing with cattle for pasture land, and the local ranchers now consider the birds to be vermin. It is worth noting that Sibley's Field Guide to Birds distinguishes cackling and Aleutian geese as separate subspecies, based on size (cackling is smaller)and a prominent white neck ring on the Aleutian. Oddly, of the 16 birds I have taken during this hunting season, all weighed in at 3 1/2 lbs or less (cackling size), but all have had the prominent white neck ring (characteristic of the Aleutian). It appears Mr. Sibley needs to clear up his description a bit. His illustrations are superb, however.
Posted by George Johnson on January 24,2009 | 08:18 PM
I have a love for all wildlife waterfowl is one i live for. But the foxs were put on the islands for profit for man. It is far to say they should not been there. The fox has there own in the would. Thats where they should be. Good for the geese. I have foxs where i live and that is a place for them and i do like to see them.
Posted by frank peters on January 23,2009 | 03:00 PM
To answer a few questions: Yes they were shot. No they were not native, they were a destructive invasive species. and no they could not be trapped because PETA did not want to fund the relocation.
Posted by John B. Hammond on January 21,2009 | 11:55 PM
good story
Posted by Tom on January 20,2009 | 11:23 AM
I enjoyed the Aleutians when I was stationed on Shemya during 1970-71. I'd like to visit again.
Posted by Tom D on January 14,2009 | 10:41 PM
If saving a species is evil, here's three cheers for evil... ...and here's hoping for lots more of it!
Posted by Tim S on January 11,2009 | 08:24 PM
What a beautiful and moving story, there should be more Bob "Sea Otter" Jones in this world!
Posted by Ivelisse Jimenez on January 11,2009 | 11:24 AM
It is virtually impossible for anyone standing near Homer, AK to have seen ANY Aleutian geese.....there are no records from them that far north. They migrate across the Gulf of Alaska directly to western Washington from west of Kodiak Island, which is 100 miles south and west of Homer. Further, the last I heard the population was still far less than 10,000.......NOT tens of thousands mentioned in the otherwise nice piece. BTW, I worked on this goose (& other birds and animals)while in the End. Sp. Progarm of the US FWS from the early 70s until my retirement in 1995.
Posted by Jay Sheppard on January 10,2009 | 08:12 PM
could you define what "cleared of foxes" actually means, and were the foxes native to the area?
Posted by Cathy on January 10,2009 | 12:20 PM
wow......really awesome....couldn't imagine a more inspirational success story......
Posted by Vinu Varughese on January 10,2009 | 10:14 AM
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