2007
DOI: 10.2193/2006-527
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Management‐Induced Reproductive Failure and Breeding Dispersal in Double‐Crested Cormorants on Lake Champlain

Abstract: We studied breeding dispersal of double‐crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) associated with management practices that suppressed their reproduction on Lake Champlain in the northeastern United States. We implemented an experiment on one colony by spraying corn oil on cormorant eggs in portions of the colony and leaving other portions untreated. Gulls (Larus spp.) consumed cormorant eggs during the oiling process, but we reduced and then eliminated predation levels after the first year of the study. We u… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…Energetic requirements of cormorants were greater on Four Brothers Islands than on Young Island. The unintended consequence of managing cormorant productivity on Young Island was dispersal of cormorants (Duerr et al, 2007) to a site where energy demands were greater and, thus, total fish consumption by cormorants on Lake Champlain increased. An expected consequence of oiling cormorant eggs is a reduction in activity levels and energy demands of adults whose eggs were oiled because they do not have to expend energy to provision nestlings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Energetic requirements of cormorants were greater on Four Brothers Islands than on Young Island. The unintended consequence of managing cormorant productivity on Young Island was dispersal of cormorants (Duerr et al, 2007) to a site where energy demands were greater and, thus, total fish consumption by cormorants on Lake Champlain increased. An expected consequence of oiling cormorant eggs is a reduction in activity levels and energy demands of adults whose eggs were oiled because they do not have to expend energy to provision nestlings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second colony was Four Brothers Islands, New York, owned by The Nature Conservancy and managed by its Adirondack Chapter. The two study sites are 35 km apart; further descriptions are given in Duerr et al (2007).…”
Section: Study Sitementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While wildlife management can be considered a science, the efficacy of cormorant management is far from certain, and is criticized by scientists and advocacy groups alike (CDI 2008a;Cuthbert et al 2002;Korfanty et al 1997). Because double-crested cormorants are so widespread, management can result in birds abandoning one colony for another (Duerr et al 2007) or alternatively, an actively reduced colony may repopulate over time with cormorants from other colonies. According to Korfanty et al (1997: 140), "[a]uthorized techniques (e.g., shooting adults, hunting seasons, harassing with flare guns, and oiling eggs) have not been successful in controlling [cormorants] over larger geographic areas or in the longer term."…”
Section: Cormorant Management: 2008 and Beyondmentioning
confidence: 99%