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Volume 52, No. 2

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Assessing the short- and long-term response of gulls to non-lethal hazing on an offshore island.


Authors

PETE WARZYBOK1*, NADAV NUR1, RUSSELL W. BRADLEY1,4, DAN GROUT2,5 & GERARD J. McCHESNEY3
1Point Blue Conservation Science, 3820 Cypress Drive, Petaluma, California, 94954, USA *(pwarzybok@pointblue.org)
2Island Conservation, 2161 Delaware Ave., Suite A, Santa Cruz, California, 95060, USA
3U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Farallon Islands National Wildlife Refuge, 1 Marshlands Road, Fremont, California, 94555, USA
4Current address: Santa Rosa Island Research Station, CSU Channel Islands, 1 University Drive, Camarillo, California, 93012, USA
5Current address: Grout Biological Consulting, 8154 Mill Creek Road, Healdsburg, California, 95448, USA

Citation

Warzybok, P., Nur, N., Bradley, R.W., Grout, D. & McChesney, G.J. 2024. Assessing the short- and long-term response of gulls to non-lethal hazing on an offshore island. . Marine Ornithology 52: 317 - 329
http://doi.org/10.5038/2074-1235.52.2.1598

Received 10 October 2023, accepted 16 April 2024

Date Published: 2024/10/15
Date Online: 2024/10/04
Key words: avian deterrence, habituation, hazing techniques, mouse eradication, non-lethal hazing, South Farallon Islands, Western Gull

Abstract

Non-lethal bird hazing techniques are commonly used to protect public health and safety, defend crops, and safeguard the birds themselves. Examples of their use include warding them away from airports, landfills, oil spills, and other avian toxic exposure situations. Herein we examine the efficacy of non-lethal hazing tools for minimizing impacts to Gulls Larus spp. prior to a proposed eradication of introduced House Mice Mus musculus at the South Farallon Islands, 30 km offshore of the Central California coast. Methods considered for removing mice include the aerial application of rodenticide, which poses an adverse risk to non-target wildlife, including Western Gulls L. occidentalis. During a 15-day hazing trial period conducted in late November and early December 2012, we evaluated the effectiveness of a combination of non-lethal wildlife hazing techniques, including biosonics, pyrotechnics, lasers, helicopter, and effigies for temporary reduction in gull attendance. We found that gull numbers continuously decreased during the trial period, achieving 92%-99.7% reduction in abundance during the last four days of hazing, relative to pre-trial counts. Gull attendance remained very low for at least four days after the cessation of hazing, and there was no evidence of habituation. We also compared counts from winter 2012 to counts during the same dates in 2010 and 2011 and concluded that our measures had reduced gull numbers by as much as 98% at the end of the hazing period. Variation in hazing efficacy was best explained by a model that included hazing method, cumulative day of trial, and time of day. Specifically, lasers, pyrotechnics, and techniques that combined auditory and visual stimuli had the greatest hazing efficacy. Our results demonstrate that non-lethal hazing can be highly effective at reducing gull numbers at roost sites in late November and December in central California, indicating substantial reduction in exposure risk during the proposed mouse eradication.

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