Abstract

Large population increases of Arctic-breeding waterfowls over recent decades have intensified the conflict with agricultural interests in both Eurasia and North America. In the spring-staging region Vesterålen in sub-Arctic Norway, sheep, dairy and meat farmers have reported reduced agricultural grassland yields due to pink-footed geese Anser brachyrhynchus and barnacle geese Branta leucopsis that rest and forage in the region for 3–4 weeks in spring on their way to their breeding grounds on Svalbard. Here, we report from an experimental exclosure design where goose access to plots at three grassland fields in Vesterålen was prevented. The experiment was conducted over 3 years between 2012 and 2014. Goose abundance varied greatly between fields and years as a function of variable spring weather and forage quantity, facilitating evaluation of longer-term impacts under contrasting grazing intensities. First and second harvest yields across fields and years were 20% and 19% higher in exclosures than in plots open for grazing, while total yields (sum of first and second harvests) were on average 27% higher. Within-year effects on harvest yields varied substantially, primarily due to highly contrasting sward development during the spring-staging periods. Cool weather (2012) led to slow sward development and little or no effects on harvest yields, warmer weather (2013) resulted in generally large effects, while variable weather (2014) led to treatment effects varying across fields, with one field experiencing 61% higher yields in exclosures while there were no significant impacts on first-harvest yields at the two other fields. Goose grazing did not increase dry weight-based proportions of weeds. Overall, the farmers' reports on yield-loss due to goose grazing were confirmed, although impacts varied substantially between years. A novel finding is that second-harvest yields were also reduced. For the most affected farmers, it is unlikely that the current subsidy scheme is sufficient to cover all the their losses.

Highlights

  • Agriculture at high northern latitudes is constrained by low temperature

  • The Svalbard-breeding populations of pink-footed goose (Anser brachyrhynchus Baillon) and barnacle goose (Branta leucopsis Bechstein) have stopover sites during the early growing season in the Vesterålen archipelago of sub-Arctic Norway (Fig. 1) where they feed on newly snow-free agricultural grasslands (Tombre et al, 2005)

  • Our first hypothesis that excluding geese’ access to grassland plots would increase first-harvest yields was confirmed

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Summary

Introduction

Agriculture at high northern latitudes is constrained by low temperature. due to a warmer than average climate for its latitudes, the coastal regions of north-westernmost Europe have large land areas allocated to agriculture (Höglind et al, 2010). Large population increases of Arctic-breeding goose species have intensified the conflict with agricultural interests in both Eurasia and North America (Fox and Madsen, 2017; Lefebvre et al, 2017; Cuker, 2020). Arcticbreeding goose species that migrate in groups of several thousands of individuals are causing severe conflicts and challenges for sustainable farming at their stopover sites in spring, grazing intensively over a limited time-period on vulnerable agricultural grasslands (Bjerke et al, 2014a; Fox et al, 2017; Olsen et al, 2017). The Svalbard-breeding populations of pink-footed goose (Anser brachyrhynchus Baillon) and barnacle goose (Branta leucopsis Bechstein) have stopover sites during the early growing season in the Vesterålen archipelago of sub-Arctic Norway (Fig. 1) where they feed on newly snow-free agricultural grasslands (Tombre et al, 2005). Reduced snow cover at nest initiation may boost the populations as more pairs find snow-free nest sites within the narrow time window for breeding in the high-Arctic (Madsen et al, 2007; Jensen et al, 2014)

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