Distribution and Movements of Brood-rearing Lesser Snow Geese in Relation to Petroleum Development in Arctic Alaska
Author(s) -
Stephen R. Johnson
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
arctic
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.503
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1923-1245
pISSN - 0004-0843
DOI - 10.14430/arctic1076
Subject(s) - brood , snow , flock , goose , ecology , fishery , population , bay , geography , biology , demography , archaeology , sociology , meteorology
Environmental scientists were concerned that construction of the Endicott Project in the outer Sagavanirktok River delta, east of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, would obstruct brood-rearing movements of Alaska's largest established nesting population of lesser snow geese ( Chen caerulescens caerulescens ). During 1980-84, prior to the Endicott Project, the distribution of snow goose flocks during the brood-rearing period was generally less than 5 km from the coast and 15 km from the nesting colony. Prior to development, the average distance between brood-rearing areas used during consecutive years by individual banded birds was 4.7±2.9 km (mean ±s.d.). After development commenced during winter 1984-85, the distribution of brood-rearing flocks expanded inland as far as 9 km and eastward as far as 32 km from the nesting colony. The average distance between brood-rearing areas used during consecutive years by individual banded birds was 8.0±7.5 km. The proportion of brood-rearing snow geese captured on the east side of the Endicott Road and Causeway (east of the nesting colony) during the post-construction years (1985-93) was not significantly different from the proportion using the same area before construction (1980-84). The hypothesis that the Endicott Road and Causeway obstructed eastward movements of brood-rearing snow geese can be rejected.
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