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Emperor goose

The emperor goose (Anser canagicus), also known as the beach goose[6] or the painted goose,[7] is a waterfowl species in the family Anatidae, which contains the ducks, geese, and swans. In summer, the emperor goose is found in remote coastal areas near the Bering Sea in arctic and sub-arctic Alaska and the Russian Far East, where it breeds in monogamous pairs. It migrates south to winter in ice-free mudflats and coasts in Alaska, mostly the Aleutian Islands, and Canada's British Columbia, rarely reaching the contiguous United States. Listed as near threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the species' population is declining due to threats such as pollution, hunting, and climate change.[1]

Emperor goose
An adult emperor goose

Vulnerable  (NatureServe)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Anseriformes
Family: Anatidae
Genus: Anser
Species:
A. canagicus
Binomial name
Anser canagicus
(Sevastianov, 1802)
Synonyms[5]
  • Anas canadicus
  • Anas canagica Sewastianoff, 1802[3]
  • Ansas canagicus
  • Anser canagica
  • Anser canagicus
  • Answer pictus
  • Bernicla canagica
  • Bernicla picta
  • Chen canagica
  • Chloephaga canagica
  • Chloephaga picta
  • Chloephaga pictus
  • Philacte canadica
  • Philacte canagica Bannister, 1870[4]
  • Philacte canagicus

Taxonomy edit

The emperor goose was described in 1802 as Anas canagica. Its type locality is Kanaga Island, which is located in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. The species has sometimes been classified in the genus Chen and less commonly in its own genus, Philacte.[8]

Description edit

 
Stained head in summer

The emperor goose has a stout blue-gray body,[6] with spots of black and white, which cause it to have a "scaled appearance".[9] Its head and the back of its neck are white and tinged with amber-yellow;[7] unlike the snow goose, the white does not extend to the front of the neck.

The goose is also characterized by a black chin and throat, a white tail, a pink bill, which is tipped with white, and yellow-orange legs and feet.[7][10] The underside of the emperor goose's wings is gray, unlike the snow goose, which has black and white on the underside of its wings. The head of adults frequently turns to a reddish-brown color in summer, due to its feeding in tidal pools with iron oxide.[10]

Goslings (i.e. young shortly after hatching) are grayish-white colored; unlike adults, their bill is black. Goslings are also distinguished from adults by having gray, brown, or black feet and an area of white surrounding the bill for the first three weeks after hatching.

Juveniles (i.e. immature specimens older than goslings) are mostly gray colored, with a small amount of white on their feathers. Younger juveniles have a dark head and neck,[10] with their head being dusty-colored with patches of white.[7] However, after October, their head and upper neck turn to mostly white, although they still have scattered darker feathers. By the first winter, juveniles have the same coloring and features as adults.[10]

Measurements and weight edit

Adult males grow to a total length of 26–28 inches (66–71 cm) and females 25.6–27.5 inches (65–70 cm).

Other measurements in males, sampled from four specimens in Alaska and California, include a 2.5–2.98-inch (6.4–7.6 cm) tarsus (lower leg), a 1.42–1.6-inch (3.6–4.1 cm) bill, and a 13.5–15.5-inch (34–39 cm) folded wing. These measurements are similar in females, but females have a slightly shorter folded wing of 14.75–15.45 inches (37.5–39.2 cm) based on two Alaskan individuals.[11] The goose has a wingspan of 119 centimetres (47 in).[8] Because of its short wings, it flies slowly, requiring quick strokes.[10]

Males weigh between 2.766 kilograms (6.10 lb) and 3.129 kilograms (6.90 lb). They have a mean weight of 2.316 kilograms (5.11 lb), while females have a mean weight of 1.945 kilograms (4.29 lb).[8] The average weight of juveniles is 1.165 kilograms (2.57 lb) in males and 1.107 kilograms (2.44 lb) in females. Roughly 5–7.5 weeks after hatching, the goose averages a weight of 2.370 kilograms (5.22 lb) and 1.926 kilograms (4.25 lb) in males and females, respectively.[10] It has a heavy body and short neck compared to other geese.[12] Although the species can live to age 25 in captivity, it reaches age 12 in the wild.[13]

Behavior edit

 
Eggs
Sound of the emperor goose

The emperor goose is migratory, traveling north in the summer to breed and south for the winter.[14] Unlike many goose species, which migrate thousands of miles, the emperor goose travels a few hundred miles for migration,[15] usually about 370 miles (600 km) to 470 miles (760 km).[8] Breeding birds molt near the breeding colonies, but geese unsuccessful with breeding move to either St. Lawrence Island or the Chukchi Peninsula to molt prior to the main southerly migration for winter.[16]

Breeding edit

The breeding season starts in late June in Russia, but begins a few weeks earlier in Alaska, generally between 20 May and 3 June.[8] Only individuals three years or older will mate. A monogamous species, female emperor geese have a single mate throughout their life and only mate with any other male if their mate dies.[13] The species molts from late July to early August and leaves its breeding grounds later than any other species.[11]

The emperor goose breeds on tundra, building its nests in areas 10 miles (16 km) or closer to the coast.[14] The nests are typically constructed in marshes.[11] They are built as holes in the ground without containing nesting material, but are later built up with vegetation, such as leaves,[7] and feathers, which the female plucks from herself.[11]

The species usually lays 4–6 eggs, but it can lay anywhere from 2 to 8; eggs are often laid in the nests of other emperor geese families.[14] Eggs measure 7.86 centimetres (3.09 in) by 5.21 centimetres (2.05 in) on average, with an elliptical shape and a smooth shell. They are initially white colored, but become speckled with stains from their nest.[12] Egg incubation, usually lasting 24 days, is performed only by females.[14]

According to The Game Birds of California, a 1918 book, surveys of the species' nests showed that the male did not stay with the nest. However, the Beardsley Zoo says that although the male does not help build the nest, it defends it. The eggs hatch in late June and early July.[11] Exhibiting precociality, young are able to walk and swim hours after hatching,[14] as well as feed themselves. They typically vacate the nest the same day as their hatching, although they do not wander far from their parents until after two months.[13] Young can fly once 50−60 days old.[14] 10% of emperor geese remain alive after their first year.[13]

 
Flying close to the ground

Individuals of the species usually only interact with their family; however, larger flocks collect during the breeding season and the molting season.[13] It is one of the most unsocial goose species; the only goose less social than it is the black brant.[11] It stays low when flying, usually keeping below 90 feet (27 m) above the ground and often coming close to touching the ground with its wings.[12]

Diet edit

In the summer, the species' diet consists of vegetation, such as shoots, roots, and berries, while in the winter it primarily eats bivalve molluscs (which it uses its sense of touch to catch)[13] and algae.[14]

Unlike other goose species,[10] its diet mostly consists of animals,[12] causing its flesh to have a strong flavor.[12] When living near water, it eats at the edge of water bodies, which has given it the name "Beach Goose".[6] If the species feels threatened, it goes into a body of water and swims away until the threat is a safe distance from it.[13]

Vocalizations edit

Its vocalizations, according to Edward William Nelson, sound like "kla-ha, kla-ha, kla-ha",[12] and can be differentiated from those of other geese by having a more "nasal" sound.[8] It vocalizes less often than other geese, such as the white-fronted goose.[12]

Habitat and distribution edit

 
At Adak Island

During the summer, the emperor goose lives in Arctic and subarctic climates in the Bering Sea, around Alaska and a small part of northeast Russia.[17] Its habitats in this season include freshwater pools, inland lakes, and coastal lagoons.[13] 90% of specimens nest on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta.[15] In the winter, after its southerly migration, it lives primarily among the Aleutian Islands,[1] as well as on the Alaska Peninsula and the Kodiak Island.[15] It sometimes spends winters in Canada[1] and rarely as far south as northwestern California. Some areas in California the species has been found living in, as of 1918, include Humboldt Bay, Gridley, Davis, Rio Vista, Colusa County, Ingomar, Modesto, and Dixon.[11] Its habitats are mudflats and rocky shores in the winter,[14] in areas free of ice,[17] and tundra wetlands in the summer.[9] Its extent of occurrence is estimated to be 775,000 square kilometres (299,000 sq mi).[1]

 
A flock in the Chiniak Bay, located in the Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge

Conservation edit

As of August 2017, the emperor goose's population is increasing slowly.[18] In 1879, the emperor goose was found by Edward William Nelson to be abundant along the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta.

In 1923, however, Arthur Cleveland Bent observed much fewer specimens, and reported that the population had decreased over the past 30 years prior to that. Bent said that "large numbers are killed each year and their eggs taken by the natives, even within the limits of what is supposed to be a reservation", which was a major reason for the goose's decrease in population.[12] In 1964, the goose's population was 139,000, which decreased to 42,000 in 1986.

The population subsequently increased,[6] with its population having been 85,000 in 2002 and over 98,000 in 2015;[19] According to the emperor goose's entry on the Red List of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which was entered on 1 October 2016, the total population of the emperor goose is decreasing.

However, it also said that the trend is not clear and it is increasing in parts of North America.[1] Julian Fischer, a wildlife biologist, said in a news article published in August 2017, that the population has been experiencing a slow, steady increase.

He stated that the population had over doubled in size from the early 1980s, and that it may be as large as 170,000.[18]

 
In Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge

Although the reasons for the emperor goose's population decline are not well known, it is believed to be threatened by oil pollution, hunting, and climate change.[1]

Other factors contributing to the species' population decline include competing with the cackling goose for food and the preying of goslings.[10] The emperor goose is listed as near threatened on the IUCN Red List[1] and rated 14 out of 20 on the Continental Concern Score. The 2016 State of North America's Birds' Watch List, a list of threatened birds that have no major conservation actions taking place for them, includes the emperor goose.[19]

Due to its low population in the 1980s, recreational and subsistence hunts closed for the goose in 1986 and 1987, respectively. However, 30 years later, hunts became legal again after the population grew significantly. In 2015, the Alaska Migratory Bird Co-Management Council suggested for hunting of the bird to be allowed if the population were to grow to a certain number. On 2 April 2017, subsistence hunting was allowed for the emperor goose, with hunters able to kill an unlimited number of geese. In fall 2017, emperor geese were allowed to be hunted for recreational purposes by locals of Alaska with a permit, with a limit of one bird per person.

In 2018, hunters who were not residing in Alaska were permitted to hunt the geese with a permit. However, the species cannot be hunted anywhere in the contiguous United States.[15][18]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h BirdLife International (2023). "Anser canagicus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2023: e.T22679919A228668766. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  2. ^ "Anser canagicus". NatureServe Explorer An online encyclopedia of life. 7.1. NatureServe. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  3. ^ Sewastianoff, A. F. (1802). "Description d'une nouvelle espèce de canard et d'une varieté de l'huitrier, qui se trouvent dans le cabinet d'histoire naturelle de l'Académie impériale des sciences". Nova Acta Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae (in French). 13: 346–351.
  4. ^ Bannister, B. H. (1870). "A Sketch of the Classification of the American Anserinæ". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 22 (3): 130–132. JSTOR 4624119.
  5. ^ Rockwell, Robert F.; Petersen, Margaret R.; Schmutz, Joel A. (1996). "Appendix A. Scientific nomenclature used for emperor geese". The Emperor Goose: An Annotated Bibliography. Biological Papers of the University of Alaska. Vol. 25. Fairbanks: Institute of Arctic Biology. p. 80. hdl:11122/1501. ISSN 0568-8604.
  6. ^ a b c d Schmutz, J. A.; Petersen, Margaret R.; Rockwell, R. F. "Emperor Goose". Birds of North America. doi:10.2173/bow.empgoo.01. S2CID 165071378. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  7. ^ a b c d e Pearson, Thomas Gilbert (1923). Birds of America, Volume 1 (reprint ed.). Garden City Books. pp. 163–164. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Carboneras, C.; Kirwan, G. M. (2020). Poole, Alan F (ed.). "Emperor Goose (Anser canagicus)". Handbook of the Birds of the World. Lynx Edicions. doi:10.2173/bow.empgoo.01. S2CID 165071378. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  9. ^ a b Telander, Todd (16 April 2013). Birds of Alaska. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 2. ISBN 978-0762793563. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Baldassarre, Guy A. (2014). Ducks, Geese, and Swans of North America (illustrated, revised ed.). JHU Press. pp. 115–123. ISBN 978-1421407517. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Grinnell, Joseph; Bryant, Harold Child; Storer, Tracy Irwin (1918). The Game Birds of California. University of California Press. pp. 243–246. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Bent, Arthur Cleveland (1923). Life Histories of North American Wild Fowl: Order Anseres (part) (illustrated ed.). U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 263–269. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h . Beardsley Zoo. Archived from the original on 22 January 2019. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Kaufman, Kenn (2001). Lives of North American Birds (illustrated ed.). Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 77–79. ISBN 0618159886. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d Woodford, Riley. "The Emperor of Geese". Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  16. ^ Hupp, Jerry W.; Schmutz, Joel A.; Ely, Craig R.; Syroechkovskiy, Evgeny E.; Kondratyev, Alexander V.; Eldridge, William D.; Lappo, Elena (July 2007). "Moult Migration of Emperor Geese Chen canagica between Alaska and Russia". Journal of Avian Biology. 38 (4): 462–470. doi:10.1111/j.0908-8857.2007.03969.x.
  17. ^ a b . Buttonwood Park Zoo. Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  18. ^ a b c Demer, Lisa (22 August 2017). "First chance in 30 years: Emperor geese are in season again". Anchorage Daily News. Ryan Binkley and Jason Evans. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  19. ^ a b "Emperor Goose". All About Birds. Retrieved 13 January 2019.

External links edit

  • Emperor Goose videos, pictures, and sounds from the Internet Bird Collection

emperor, goose, emperor, goose, anser, canagicus, also, known, beach, goose, painted, goose, waterfowl, species, family, anatidae, which, contains, ducks, geese, swans, summer, emperor, goose, found, remote, coastal, areas, near, bering, arctic, arctic, alaska. The emperor goose Anser canagicus also known as the beach goose 6 or the painted goose 7 is a waterfowl species in the family Anatidae which contains the ducks geese and swans In summer the emperor goose is found in remote coastal areas near the Bering Sea in arctic and sub arctic Alaska and the Russian Far East where it breeds in monogamous pairs It migrates south to winter in ice free mudflats and coasts in Alaska mostly the Aleutian Islands and Canada s British Columbia rarely reaching the contiguous United States Listed as near threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature the species population is declining due to threats such as pollution hunting and climate change 1 Emperor gooseAn adult emperor gooseConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Vulnerable NatureServe 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder AnseriformesFamily AnatidaeGenus AnserSpecies A canagicusBinomial nameAnser canagicus Sevastianov 1802 Synonyms 5 Anas canadicusAnas canagica Sewastianoff 1802 3 Ansas canagicusAnser canagicaAnser canagicusAnswer pictusBernicla canagicaBernicla pictaChen canagicaChloephaga canagicaChloephaga pictaChloephaga pictusPhilacte canadicaPhilacte canagica Bannister 1870 4 Philacte canagicus Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Measurements and weight 3 Behavior 3 1 Breeding 3 2 Diet 3 3 Vocalizations 4 Habitat and distribution 5 Conservation 6 References 7 External linksTaxonomy editThe emperor goose was described in 1802 as Anas canagica Its type locality is Kanaga Island which is located in the Aleutian Islands Alaska The species has sometimes been classified in the genus Chen and less commonly in its own genus Philacte 8 Description edit nbsp Stained head in summerThe emperor goose has a stout blue gray body 6 with spots of black and white which cause it to have a scaled appearance 9 Its head and the back of its neck are white and tinged with amber yellow 7 unlike the snow goose the white does not extend to the front of the neck The goose is also characterized by a black chin and throat a white tail a pink bill which is tipped with white and yellow orange legs and feet 7 10 The underside of the emperor goose s wings is gray unlike the snow goose which has black and white on the underside of its wings The head of adults frequently turns to a reddish brown color in summer due to its feeding in tidal pools with iron oxide 10 Goslings i e young shortly after hatching are grayish white colored unlike adults their bill is black Goslings are also distinguished from adults by having gray brown or black feet and an area of white surrounding the bill for the first three weeks after hatching Juveniles i e immature specimens older than goslings are mostly gray colored with a small amount of white on their feathers Younger juveniles have a dark head and neck 10 with their head being dusty colored with patches of white 7 However after October their head and upper neck turn to mostly white although they still have scattered darker feathers By the first winter juveniles have the same coloring and features as adults 10 Measurements and weight edit Adult males grow to a total length of 26 28 inches 66 71 cm and females 25 6 27 5 inches 65 70 cm Other measurements in males sampled from four specimens in Alaska and California include a 2 5 2 98 inch 6 4 7 6 cm tarsus lower leg a 1 42 1 6 inch 3 6 4 1 cm bill and a 13 5 15 5 inch 34 39 cm folded wing These measurements are similar in females but females have a slightly shorter folded wing of 14 75 15 45 inches 37 5 39 2 cm based on two Alaskan individuals 11 The goose has a wingspan of 119 centimetres 47 in 8 Because of its short wings it flies slowly requiring quick strokes 10 Males weigh between 2 766 kilograms 6 10 lb and 3 129 kilograms 6 90 lb They have a mean weight of 2 316 kilograms 5 11 lb while females have a mean weight of 1 945 kilograms 4 29 lb 8 The average weight of juveniles is 1 165 kilograms 2 57 lb in males and 1 107 kilograms 2 44 lb in females Roughly 5 7 5 weeks after hatching the goose averages a weight of 2 370 kilograms 5 22 lb and 1 926 kilograms 4 25 lb in males and females respectively 10 It has a heavy body and short neck compared to other geese 12 Although the species can live to age 25 in captivity it reaches age 12 in the wild 13 Behavior edit nbsp Eggs source source Sound of the emperor gooseThe emperor goose is migratory traveling north in the summer to breed and south for the winter 14 Unlike many goose species which migrate thousands of miles the emperor goose travels a few hundred miles for migration 15 usually about 370 miles 600 km to 470 miles 760 km 8 Breeding birds molt near the breeding colonies but geese unsuccessful with breeding move to either St Lawrence Island or the Chukchi Peninsula to molt prior to the main southerly migration for winter 16 Breeding edit The breeding season starts in late June in Russia but begins a few weeks earlier in Alaska generally between 20 May and 3 June 8 Only individuals three years or older will mate A monogamous species female emperor geese have a single mate throughout their life and only mate with any other male if their mate dies 13 The species molts from late July to early August and leaves its breeding grounds later than any other species 11 The emperor goose breeds on tundra building its nests in areas 10 miles 16 km or closer to the coast 14 The nests are typically constructed in marshes 11 They are built as holes in the ground without containing nesting material but are later built up with vegetation such as leaves 7 and feathers which the female plucks from herself 11 The species usually lays 4 6 eggs but it can lay anywhere from 2 to 8 eggs are often laid in the nests of other emperor geese families 14 Eggs measure 7 86 centimetres 3 09 in by 5 21 centimetres 2 05 in on average with an elliptical shape and a smooth shell They are initially white colored but become speckled with stains from their nest 12 Egg incubation usually lasting 24 days is performed only by females 14 According to The Game Birds of California a 1918 book surveys of the species nests showed that the male did not stay with the nest However the Beardsley Zoo says that although the male does not help build the nest it defends it The eggs hatch in late June and early July 11 Exhibiting precociality young are able to walk and swim hours after hatching 14 as well as feed themselves They typically vacate the nest the same day as their hatching although they do not wander far from their parents until after two months 13 Young can fly once 50 60 days old 14 10 of emperor geese remain alive after their first year 13 nbsp Flying close to the groundIndividuals of the species usually only interact with their family however larger flocks collect during the breeding season and the molting season 13 It is one of the most unsocial goose species the only goose less social than it is the black brant 11 It stays low when flying usually keeping below 90 feet 27 m above the ground and often coming close to touching the ground with its wings 12 Diet edit In the summer the species diet consists of vegetation such as shoots roots and berries while in the winter it primarily eats bivalve molluscs which it uses its sense of touch to catch 13 and algae 14 Unlike other goose species 10 its diet mostly consists of animals 12 causing its flesh to have a strong flavor 12 When living near water it eats at the edge of water bodies which has given it the name Beach Goose 6 If the species feels threatened it goes into a body of water and swims away until the threat is a safe distance from it 13 Vocalizations edit Its vocalizations according to Edward William Nelson sound like kla ha kla ha kla ha 12 and can be differentiated from those of other geese by having a more nasal sound 8 It vocalizes less often than other geese such as the white fronted goose 12 Habitat and distribution edit nbsp At Adak IslandDuring the summer the emperor goose lives in Arctic and subarctic climates in the Bering Sea around Alaska and a small part of northeast Russia 17 Its habitats in this season include freshwater pools inland lakes and coastal lagoons 13 90 of specimens nest on the Yukon Kuskokwim Delta 15 In the winter after its southerly migration it lives primarily among the Aleutian Islands 1 as well as on the Alaska Peninsula and the Kodiak Island 15 It sometimes spends winters in Canada 1 and rarely as far south as northwestern California Some areas in California the species has been found living in as of 1918 include Humboldt Bay Gridley Davis Rio Vista Colusa County Ingomar Modesto and Dixon 11 Its habitats are mudflats and rocky shores in the winter 14 in areas free of ice 17 and tundra wetlands in the summer 9 Its extent of occurrence is estimated to be 775 000 square kilometres 299 000 sq mi 1 nbsp A flock in the Chiniak Bay located in the Kodiak National Wildlife RefugeConservation editAs of August 2017 the emperor goose s population is increasing slowly 18 In 1879 the emperor goose was found by Edward William Nelson to be abundant along the Yukon Kuskokwim Delta In 1923 however Arthur Cleveland Bent observed much fewer specimens and reported that the population had decreased over the past 30 years prior to that Bent said that large numbers are killed each year and their eggs taken by the natives even within the limits of what is supposed to be a reservation which was a major reason for the goose s decrease in population 12 In 1964 the goose s population was 139 000 which decreased to 42 000 in 1986 The population subsequently increased 6 with its population having been 85 000 in 2002 and over 98 000 in 2015 19 According to the emperor goose s entry on the Red List of the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN which was entered on 1 October 2016 the total population of the emperor goose is decreasing However it also said that the trend is not clear and it is increasing in parts of North America 1 Julian Fischer a wildlife biologist said in a news article published in August 2017 that the population has been experiencing a slow steady increase He stated that the population had over doubled in size from the early 1980s and that it may be as large as 170 000 18 nbsp In Alaska Maritime National Wildlife RefugeAlthough the reasons for the emperor goose s population decline are not well known it is believed to be threatened by oil pollution hunting and climate change 1 Other factors contributing to the species population decline include competing with the cackling goose for food and the preying of goslings 10 The emperor goose is listed as near threatened on the IUCN Red List 1 and rated 14 out of 20 on the Continental Concern Score The 2016 State of North America s Birds Watch List a list of threatened birds that have no major conservation actions taking place for them includes the emperor goose 19 Due to its low population in the 1980s recreational and subsistence hunts closed for the goose in 1986 and 1987 respectively However 30 years later hunts became legal again after the population grew significantly In 2015 the Alaska Migratory Bird Co Management Council suggested for hunting of the bird to be allowed if the population were to grow to a certain number On 2 April 2017 subsistence hunting was allowed for the emperor goose with hunters able to kill an unlimited number of geese In fall 2017 emperor geese were allowed to be hunted for recreational purposes by locals of Alaska with a permit with a limit of one bird per person In 2018 hunters who were not residing in Alaska were permitted to hunt the geese with a permit However the species cannot be hunted anywhere in the contiguous United States 15 18 References edit a b c d e f g h BirdLife International 2023 Anser canagicus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2023 e T22679919A228668766 Retrieved 11 December 2023 Anser canagicus NatureServe Explorer An online encyclopedia of life 7 1 NatureServe Retrieved 12 December 2023 Sewastianoff A F 1802 Description d une nouvelle espece de canard et d une variete de l huitrier qui se trouvent dans le cabinet d histoire naturelle de l Academie imperiale des sciences Nova Acta Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae in French 13 346 351 Bannister B H 1870 A Sketch of the Classification of the American Anserinae Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 22 3 130 132 JSTOR 4624119 Rockwell Robert F Petersen Margaret R Schmutz Joel A 1996 Appendix A Scientific nomenclature used for emperor geese The Emperor Goose An Annotated Bibliography Biological Papers of the University of Alaska Vol 25 Fairbanks Institute of Arctic Biology p 80 hdl 11122 1501 ISSN 0568 8604 a b c d Schmutz J A Petersen Margaret R Rockwell R F Emperor Goose Birds of North America doi 10 2173 bow empgoo 01 S2CID 165071378 Retrieved 12 January 2019 a b c d e Pearson Thomas Gilbert 1923 Birds of America Volume 1 reprint ed Garden City Books pp 163 164 Retrieved 18 January 2019 a b c d e f Carboneras C Kirwan G M 2020 Poole Alan F ed Emperor Goose Anser canagicus Handbook of the Birds of the World Lynx Edicions doi 10 2173 bow empgoo 01 S2CID 165071378 Retrieved 14 January 2019 a b Telander Todd 16 April 2013 Birds of Alaska Rowman amp Littlefield p 2 ISBN 978 0762793563 Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c d e f g h Baldassarre Guy A 2014 Ducks Geese and Swans of North America illustrated revised ed JHU Press pp 115 123 ISBN 978 1421407517 Retrieved 14 January 2019 a b c d e f g Grinnell Joseph Bryant Harold Child Storer Tracy Irwin 1918 The Game Birds of California University of California Press pp 243 246 Retrieved 16 January 2019 a b c d e f g h Bent Arthur Cleveland 1923 Life Histories of North American Wild Fowl Order Anseres part illustrated ed U S Government Printing Office pp 263 269 Retrieved 18 January 2019 a b c d e f g h Emperor Goose Beardsley Zoo Archived from the original on 22 January 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c d e f g h Kaufman Kenn 2001 Lives of North American Birds illustrated ed Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 77 79 ISBN 0618159886 Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c d Woodford Riley The Emperor of Geese Alaska Department of Fish and Game Retrieved 12 January 2019 Hupp Jerry W Schmutz Joel A Ely Craig R Syroechkovskiy Evgeny E Kondratyev Alexander V Eldridge William D Lappo Elena July 2007 Moult Migration of Emperor Geese Chen canagica between Alaska and Russia Journal of Avian Biology 38 4 462 470 doi 10 1111 j 0908 8857 2007 03969 x a b Emperor Goose Buttonwood Park Zoo Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c Demer Lisa 22 August 2017 First chance in 30 years Emperor geese are in season again Anchorage Daily News Ryan Binkley and Jason Evans Retrieved 16 February 2019 a b Emperor Goose All About Birds Retrieved 13 January 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anser canagicus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Anser canagicus nbsp Birds portalEmperor Goose videos pictures and sounds from the Internet Bird Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emperor goose amp oldid 1212497632, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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