Labeled a "costly waste of ratepayers money," the planned Canada geese cull
The Animal Justice Party Aotearoa has referred to a plan to kill up to 1000 Canada geese
in Christchurch this month as a "costly waste of ratepayers money."
In an effort coordinated by Christchurch City Council, Environment Canterbury,
and Christchurch Airport, about $20,000 is spent year on culling the geese.
The cull was scheduled to occur this month in the vicinity of the Avon Heathcote Estuary.
Over the course of four or five hours, the geese are rounded up and administered fatal injections.
According to what ECan previously told The Press, 700–1000 geese are killed annually.
According to the Animal Justice Party, the procedure will entail euthanizing the birds
after herding them into a small space.
AJP general secretary Danette Wereta declared, "This mass massacre is an inefficient,
inhumane, and wasteful waste of ratepayers’ money."
"It is a temporary solution that ignores the underlying causes of the problem and runs
the danger of making it worse over time.
"These birds are quite gregarious and intelligent.
"It is cruel and absurd to think that you can simply kill them while adhering to the strict
guidelines for handling birds set forth in the Animal Welfare Act," Wereta stated.
The AJP asserts that habitat alteration, egg addling, and "aversive conditioning" are more
humane ways to address Christchurch's Canada geese issue.
This might entail applying methiocarb to feeding places, which makes geese stay away
from them for as long as ten weeks.
According to Wereta, "Christchurch has an opportunity to lead with compassion and
responsibility, implementing a long-term approach that
decreases confrontations while respecting animals,"
"The city can enhance results, save money, and encourage animal cohabitation
by putting into practice a compassionate Canada goose management plan.
Aggressive birds, Canada geese contaminate crops, waterways, and recreational areas
while grazing on pasture.
The Canterbury regional pest management plan does not classify the birds as pests,
despite the fact that they are generally regarded as a nuisance.
They were also taken out of the management of Fish and Game NZ in 2011 by
the Department of Conservation. To murder one back then, you needed a license.
The Christchurch Botanic Gardens employed black cutout wolf decoys in June of last
year to frighten Canada geese away from the picnic areas and demonstration gardens.
Wolfgang Bopp, the director of the gardens at the time, claimed that the issue was
the sheer volume of birds.
Bopp explained, "They are big birds, and like any big animal, what goes in the front
ends up in the back, and that is quite a lot."
The Clearwater Golf Club, which also employed the decoys to keep geese off the
fairways, told Bopp about them.
In 2021, the club began putting wooden cutouts of wild coyotes on the course to ward
off undesirable "foreign bogeys" and geese.
Because of the harm the birds cause to pasture and rivers, ECan deputy chair Deon
Swiggs has already discussed the need to categorize them as pests.
"It is just a little bit," he stated. "They are simply assuming control."
Source odt.co.nz
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