7,000 dead ducks found north of Pierre SD

NC Susan

Deceased
Test results pending from 7,000 dead ducks found north of Pierre

February 8, 2011 8:45 am


PIERRE - Wildlife officials are waiting test results from some of the more than 7,000 mallard ducks found dead last month north of Pierre.
Andy Lindbloom in the state Game, Fish and Parks Department tells KCCR radio that the die-off was discovered around Jan. 30. He says dead ducks were found in an open pond in western Sully County and on the ice at Okobojo Creek on the Missouri River.
Lindbloom says a large die-off of waterfowl is not uncommon, but he says officials still want the mallards tested. He says it doesn't appear there's any threat to other wildlife or waterfowl.
 

bobpick

Inactive
When they say "large die-off not unusual" would they kindly cite the last 5 times this has happened, with sources (news stories, etc)??
 

Wise Owl

Deceased
What are ducks doing in SD that time of year? They are supposed to be in the south where it's warmer.
THAT's the question I have. That is what is unusual in this story.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
What are ducks doing in SD that time of year? They are supposed to be in the south where it's warmer.
THAT's the question I have. That is what is unusual in this story.

Some ducks and geese stay north in the winter, we have a bunch here, some areas of water stay unfrozen except in the coldest of winters, we have such a marsh here that has probably a thousand plus geese and ducks on it right now (and it's not all that big either). Could be the ducks got hemmed in by severe weather and starved or died of thirst, especially with all of the cold weather and snow storms down south.

OR they could be a part of the die off that happened early in January when all of the other birds died. Reality we'll probably never be told the actual truth.

K-
 

Rex Jackson

Has No Life - Lives on TB
"Lindbloom says a large die-off of waterfowl is not uncommon"

wha?

Bull$#i+

Mallards are made of stone. They are a tuff duck. Plus, larges die offs never happen.
Interesting and good find.
 

bobpick

Inactive
Here is Mr. Lindbloom's contact info, compliments of the SD Fish and Game:
Agency: Dept of Game Fish and Parks
Division: Wildlife
Program: Game Management
Name: Lindbloom, Andy
Phone: (605) 223-7709 Ext:
Fax: (605)223-7717
Cell:
Building: GFP Missouri River Fisheries Center
Address: 20641 SD Hwy 1806
City: Fort Pierre Zip: 57532-6100

I think a phone call is in order.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
cross ref addition of Terris link
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=378926

[FONT=Verdana,Arial] Northern Ohio: Dead geese puzzle wildlife officials
<hr style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); background-color: rgb(0, 0, 0);" size="1"> Dead geese puzzle wildlife officials

Dozens of geese have been found dead along the Lake Erie shore and others are so sick that they are unable to fly, wildlife officials said.

Many have been found dead near Toledo, where the geese often gather in the open waters of the lake. But others have been found dead in a nearby river and along the lake 70 miles away near Cleveland.

"They will fall out of the sky and have trouble staying upright," said Dave Sherman, a biologist with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

Wildlife experts are awaiting tests on some of the dead birds to determine the cause.

The number of dead geese appears to be smaller than the massive bird die-offs that have gained attention elsewhere around the country. Those deaths in Arkansas — where officials believe the birds were spooked by fireworks — and subsequent ones in Tennessee, Kentucky and Louisiana aren't believed to be connected or a sign of widespread contagion.

In Ohio, wildlife officials first noticed that mallard ducks were showing signs of an illness a few weeks ago, but now it's mostly Canada geese.

State wildlife officer Cody Klima told The Blade newspaper that he picked up about two dozen dead geese in the last few weeks. He said thin ice on the lake is preventing them from reaching more geese.

"I'm guessing some of them are drowning," Klima said. "They lose their coordination and flip upside down."

Some of the sick geese have been dropped off at a nonprofit wildlife rehabilitation center in Castalia — 18 of 23 geese have died, said Sarah Langdon, a supervisor at Back to the Wild. The five others are acting normal again and may be released soon, she said.

http://www.sanduskyregister.com/news...life-officials
__________________
Terri in Indiana
[/FONT]
 

gdpetti

Inactive
Near there:
Peculiar geese deaths baffle wildlife officials in US
Fri, 18 Feb 2011 09:35 CSTTOM HENRY
Toledo Blade

© The Blade/Jeremy Wadsworth
Sick birds have been taken to area facilities that try to rehabilitate wildlife. Some birds got better; most did not.
Ailment afflicting birds around Lake Erie

Several dozen Canada geese along western Lake Erie's shoreline have recently died or are presumed dead while others have become so sick they cannot hold up their heads, fly, or maintain control of their motor functions.

State wildlife investigators are stumped, awaiting word on tests that a national wildlife laboratory in Wisconsin has been doing on some of the dead birds.

"They will fall out of the sky and have trouble staying upright," said Dave Sherman, a biologist at the Crane Creek Wildlife Research Station the Ohio Department of Natural Resources operates in Ottawa County.

Symptoms began manifesting themselves first with mallards about two or three weeks ago.

"Now, it's mostly geese we're seeing," he said.

The bulk of the problem appears to be in the Oregon area, Mr. Sherman said, in the vicinity of open water near FirstEnergy Corp.'s coal-fired Bay Shore power plant, where birds typically congregate this time of year.

The plant's warm-water discharge often keeps that part of the lake from freezing.

But the problems are not limited to that area.

Mr. Sherman said some of the sick or dead geese have been found as far east as Vermilion, Ohio, which is halfway between Sandusky and Cleveland.

Four were recently found on a thawed part of the Maumee River near downtown Perrysburg.

Cody Klima, Ohio DNR wildlife officer, said he has picked up about two dozen goose carcasses over the past couple of weeks.

He also said he's taken that many sick birds or more to Nature's Nursery in Whitehouse and Back to the Wild in Castalia, Ohio, two facilities that attempt to rehabilitate injured wildlife.

© The Blade/Jeremy Wadsworth
Laura Zitzelberger, operations director at Nature's Nursery in Whitehouse, said at least eight or nine of a dozen geese that were brought to the facility died or had to be euthanized.

Officials at those facilities have not had much success with this outbreak.

Many of the sick, injured, or dead geese are inaccessible because warming temperatures have made the ice too dangerous to traverse.

"I'm guessing some of them are drowning," Mr. Klima said. "They lose their coordination and flip upside down."

He said he has been getting about a dozen calls a day from area residents reporting new sightings or seeking answers about birds they've seen.

"They're throwing their heads back. They're losing all balance and literally almost all back-somersault and have a seizure," according to Laura Zitzelberger, operations director at Nature's Nursery. At least eight or nine of about a dozen geese that were brought to Nature's Nursery either died or had to be euthanized.

Two ducks and one of the geese that exhibited symptoms appear to have recovered. Another goose is struggling, she said.

At Back to the Wild, 18 of 23 geese dropped off for treatment have died, nearly all within the past three days, said Sarah Langdon, Back to the Wild supervisor.

Of the remaining five, three are "acting like normal geese again" and may be released soon, she said.

Seventeen of those 23 injured birds were brought in from the Bay Shore plant area, she said.

Chris Barry, a Perrysburg engineer, said he has seen three carcasses and a sick goose on the Perrysburg side of the Maumee River since Saturday. He said they were only 20 to 30 feet from the shore, but the ice was too dangerous to walk on.

"They're at the edge of the ice," Mr. Barry said, referring to an area near Water and Pine streets in Perrysburg.

The sick bird "was floating in a tiny patch of open water," Mr. Barry said.

"It didn't have much strength left," he said.

Anyone who sees geese acting strangely can contact the Crane Creek Wildlife Research Station at 419-898-0960 or the ODNR office in Findlay.
fair use http://www.sott.net/articles/show/224387-Peculiar-geese-deaths-baffle-wildlife-officials-in-US
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
hmmmmmmmmm drowning geese, wonder if there is a connection between them and the drowning seals and polar bears from say about two years ago?

K-
 
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