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Lake
Springfield's Snow Geese
Hit The Internet
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SEE THE VIDEO --
Photos
Taken From Larry & Loretta Michaud's Back Yard
It
is certainly hard to picture. But it becomes a bit easier
after a visit to Lake Springfield in late February. Last
Wednesday, tens of thousands of snow geese including
snow, blue and Rosss geese carpeted Lake Springfield
north of Lindsay Bridge.
They
sat on the lake in a giant kidney-shaped raft. Every once
in awhile they would decide to get up and move. Its
then that the word carpet is most appropriate.
They start at one end of the flock, taking to the air from
one end to the other, as if an old carpet was being pulled
up.
When
the flock took off together, it obscured the far shoreline
of Lake Springfield. The smokestacks of the City Water,
Light and Power plant momentarily disappeared in a whirl
of white and black.
Its
not a new spectacle. Snow geese have been making spring
appearances at Lake Springfield for some time now. But it
is no less impressive whether its the first time or
10th time.
Snow
geese a blue goose really is just the dark color
phase of a snow goose once were near extinction.
They have staged a comeback as spectacular as their spring
migration shows.
Snow geese have prospered partly because they have learned
to exploit waste grain during migration.
The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says there are more than
5 million breeding snow geese. Their numbers have tripled
over the past 30 years theyve been counted during
the winter.
Unfortunately, wildlife experts fear snow geese will become
victims of their own success.
They nest in Canada, and the Arctic tundra they choose for
nesting is fragile. If too many geese dig up too many roots
and tubers, it can take too long to recover.
According
to the Fish and Wildlife Service, snow geese may be competing
for resources and space with other birds. Large areas
of the breeding grounds around Hudson Bay have been denuded
of all vegetation by geese through overgrazing, grubbing
and shoot-pulling, says a Fish and Wildlife Service
report. (It is) a situation that scientists believe
may also be contributing to the decline of breeding populations
of other migratory bird species that share the breeding
grounds and winter in the United States.
To
compensate, hunting rules have been loosened and goose hunters
have been given a whole new arsenal of ways to take them.
Snow geese can be hunted through March 31 well after
other waterfowl seasons have closed.
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