Barnacle goose

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Barnacle goose
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Anseriformes
Family: Anatidae
Genus: Branta
Species:
B. leucopsis
Binomial name
Branta leucopsis
(Bechstein, 1803)
Range of the barnacle goose (note: also breeds in Iceland; grey is indicated as feral, but these populations were established by both wild birds and escaped captives, see text)

The barnacle goose (Branta leucopsis) is a species of goose that belongs to the genus Branta of black geese, which contains species with largely black plumage, distinguishing them from the grey Anser species. Despite its superficial similarity to the brant goose, genetic analysis has shown it is an eastern derivative of the cackling goose lineage.

Taxonomy and naming[edit]

The barnacle goose was first classified taxonomically by Johann Matthäus Bechstein in 1803. Branta is a Latinised form of Old Norse Brandgás, "burnt (black) goose" and the specific epithet is from the Ancient Greek leukos "white", and opsis "faced".[2]

The barnacle goose and the similar brant goose were previously considered one species, and were formerly believed to spawn from the goose barnacle.[3] This gave rise to the English name of the barnacle goose and the scientific name of the brant.[2] It is sometimes claimed that the word comes from a Celtic word for "limpet", but the sense-history seems to go in the opposite direction.[4]

The barnacle myth can be dated back to at least the 12th century. Gerald of Wales claimed to have seen these birds hanging down from pieces of timber, William Turner accepted the theory, and John Gerard claimed to have seen the birds emerging from their shells. The legend persisted until the end of the 18th century. In County Kerry, until relatively recently, Catholics abstaining from meat during Lent could still eat this bird because it was considered as fish.[5]

Description[edit]

The barnacle goose is a medium-sized goose, 55–70 cm (22–28 in) long,[6] with a wingspan of 130–145 cm (51–57 in) and a body mass of 1.21–2.23 kg (2.7–4.9 lb).[7][8] It has a white face and black head, neck, and upper breast. Its belly is white. The wings and its back are silver-gray with black-and-white bars that look like they are shining when the light reflects on it. During flight, a V-shaped white rump patch and the silver-gray underwing linings are visible.

Distribution and population size[edit]

There are three original populations of barnacle geese, with separate breeding and wintering ranges. Since the 1960s, two new breeding populations have established themselves, both located along migration routes of two of the original populations. The five populations are:

  • Breeding in eastern Greenland, wintering on the Hebrides of western Scotland and in western Ireland. Population increased from about 7,000 individuals in the 1960s to 44,000 in 2011.[9]
  • A recently established population, derived from the Greenlandic population, has bred more-or-less regularly in Iceland since 1964. The population has rapidly increased in the last few decades; more than 500 breeding pairs in 2014. Winters same places as Greenlandic population.[10]
  • Breeding on Svalbard, Norway, wintering almost entirely in Solway Firth on the England/Scotland border, with small numbers elsewhere in the region. Population increased from a few hundred individuals in the 1940s to about 34,000 in 2004.[11][12]
  • Breeding on Novaya Zemlya, Dolgy Island, Kanin Peninsula, Yugorsky Peninsula and the Barents Sea coastline in the Russian Arctic, wintering in the Wadden Sea area in southwest Denmark, northwest Germany and the Netherlands. Increased from about 70,000 individuals in 1980 to 1.2 million individuals in 2015.[13]
  • A recent population, derived from the Russian population along with escaped captives, has become established since 1971 breeding on islands in the Baltic Sea, and on islands and coasts of the southern North Sea (Estonia, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, Germany and Belgium). Winters in or near breeding range or moves to the Wadden Sea. Some exchange with Russian population continues. Rapidly increasing; the Danish, Dutch and Swedish populations each contain several thousand breeding pairs, and the Belgian, Estonian, Finnish and German populations each contain several hundred breeding pairs.[14][15][16]

Occasionally, a wild bird will appear in the Northeastern United States or Canada, but care must be taken to separate out wild birds from escaped individuals, as barnacle geese are popular waterfowl with collectors.

Ecology, behavior, and life history[edit]

Barnacle geese frequently build their nests high on mountain cliffs, away from predators (primarily Arctic foxes and polar bears), but also away from their feeding grounds such as lakes, rivers. Like all geese, the goslings are not fed by the adults. Instead of bringing food to the newly hatched goslings, the goslings are brought to the ground. The parents show them the way to jump from the cliff and the goslings follow them by imprinting and take the plunge.[17]

Unable to fly, the goslings, in their first days of life, jump off the cliff and fall; their small size, feathery down, and very light weight helps to protect some of them from serious injury when they hit the rocks below, but many die from the impact. Arctic foxes are attracted by the noise made by the parent geese during this time, and capture many dead or injured goslings. The foxes also stalk the young as they are led by the parents to wetland feeding areas.[18] Due to these hardships only 50% of the chicks survive the first month.[19]

Conservation[edit]

The barnacle goose is common and widespread, and its population and breeding range has increased in recent decades.[1] The barnacle goose is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds applies.[20]

Folklore[edit]

The natural history of the barnacle goose was long surrounded with a legend claiming that they were born of driftwood:

Nature produces [Bernacae] against Nature in the most extraordinary way. They are like marsh geese but somewhat smaller. They are produced from fir timber tossed along the sea, and are at first like gum. Afterwards they hang down by their beaks as if they were a seaweed attached to the timber, and are surrounded by shells in order to grow more freely. Having thus in process of time been clothed with a strong coat of feathers, they either fall into the water or fly freely away into the air. They derived their food and growth from the sap of the wood or from the sea, by a secret and most wonderful process of alimentation. I have frequently seen, with my own eyes, more than a thousand of these small bodies of birds, hanging down on the sea-shore from one piece of timber, enclosed in their shells, and already formed. They do not breed and lay eggs like other birds, nor do they ever hatch any eggs, nor do they seem to build nests in any corner of the earth.[21]

The legend was widely repeated in, for example, Vincent of Beauvais's great encyclopedia. However, it was also criticized by other medieval authors, including Albertus Magnus.[21]

This belief may be related to the fact that these geese were never seen in summer, when they were supposedly developing underwater (they were actually breeding in remote Arctic regions) in the form of barnacles—which came to have the name "barnacle" because of this legend.[22]

Based on these legends—indeed, the legends may have been invented for this purpose[23]—some Irish clerics considered barnacle goose flesh to be acceptable fast day food, a practice that was criticized by Giraldus Cambrensis, a Welsh author:

...Bishops and religious men (viri religiosi) in some parts of Ireland do not scruple to dine off these birds at the time of fasting, because they are not flesh nor born of flesh... But in so doing they are led into sin. For if anyone were to eat of the leg of our first parent (Adam) although he was not born of flesh, that person could not be adjudged innocent of eating meat.[21]

At the Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215), Pope Innocent III explicitly prohibited the eating of these geese during Lent, arguing that despite their unusual reproduction, they lived and fed like ducks and so were of the same nature as other birds.[24]

The question of the nature of barnacle geese also came up as a matter of Jewish dietary law in the Halakha, and Rabbeinu Tam (1100–71) determined that they were kosher (even if born of trees) and should be slaughtered following the normal prescriptions for birds.[21]

In one Jewish legend, the barnacle goose is purported to have its beak forever attached to the tree from which it grew just as the Adne Sadeh is fixed to the earth by its navel cord.[25] The mythical barnacle tree, believed in the Middle Ages to have barnacles that opened to reveal geese, may have a similar origin to the other legends already mentioned.[26]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b BirdLife International (2018). "Branta leucopsis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T22679943A131909954. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T22679943A131909954.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b Jobling, James A (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 77, 225. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  3. ^ Minogue, Kristen (29 January 2013). "Science, Superstition and the Goose Barnacle". Smithsonian Environmental Research Center. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  4. ^ "barnacle". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  5. ^ Cocker, Mark; Mabey, Richard (2005). Birds Britannica. London: Chatto & Windus. pp. 78–80. ISBN 0-7011-6907-9.
  6. ^ Soothill, Eric; Whitehead, Peter (1978). Wildfowl of the World. London: Peerage Books. ISBN 0-907408-38-9.
  7. ^ Dunning, John B. Jr., ed. (1992). CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8493-4258-5.
  8. ^ Ekin, U. (2011). "Branta leucopsis barnacle goose". Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  9. ^ "NatureScot Commissioned Report 568: Status and population viability of Greenland barnacle geese on Islay". NatureScot. 2014. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  10. ^ Skarphéðinsson, Kristinn Haukur (October 2018). "Helsingi (Branta leucopsis)". Náttúrufræðistofnun (Iceland Institute of Natural History). Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  11. ^ "Barnacle goose (Branta leucopsis)". spitsbergen-svalbard.com. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  12. ^ "NatureScot Commissioned Report 756: Status and population viability of Svalbard barnacle geese in Scotland". NatureScot. 2014. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  13. ^ Lameris, T.; et al. (2023). "Barnacle geese Branta leucopsis breeding on Novaya Zemlya: current distribution and population size estimated from tracking data". Polar Biology. 46: 67–76. doi:10.1007/s00300-022-03110-8. hdl:20.500.11755/87819d3d-93ca-4c5b-a146-5510549665a0.
  14. ^ Feige, N.; et al. (2008). "Newly established breeding sites of the Barnacle Goose Branta leucopsis in North-western Europe" (PDF). Vogelwelt. 129: 244–252.
  15. ^ Mortensen, C.E. (2011). "Etablering og udvikling af ynglebestanden af Bramgås på Saltholm, 1992-2010". Dansk Orn. Foren. Tidsskr. 105: 159–166.
  16. ^ "Bramgås". Danish Ornithological Society. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  17. ^ Saul Mcleod (16 June 2023). "Konrad Lorenz: Theory of Imprinting in Psychology". Simply Psychology.
  18. ^ Life Story (TV series)#Episodes
  19. ^ Barnacle goose, Mountains, Hostile Planet
  20. ^ "Waterbird species to which the Agreement applies". UNEP/AEWA (United Nations Environment Programme/African-Eurasian Waterbird Agreement). Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  21. ^ a b c d Giraldus Cambrensis "Topographica Hiberniae" (1187), quoted in Edward Heron-Allen, Barnacles in Nature and in Myth, 1928, reprinted in 2003, p. 10. ISBN 0-7661-5755-5 full text at Google Books Archived 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ "...all the evidence shows that the name was originally applied to the bird which had the marvellous origin, not to the shell..." Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd Edition, 1989
  23. ^ Lankester, Edwin Ray (1970) [1915]. Diversions of a Naturalist. p. 119. ISBN 0-8369-1471-6. this identification was due to the exercise of a little authority on the part of the clergy in both France and Britain, who were thus enabled to claim the abundant "barnacle goose" as a fish in its nature and origin rather than a fowl, and so to use it as food on the fast-days of the Church
  24. ^ Lankester, Edwin Ray (1970) [1915]. Diversions of a Naturalist. p. 119. ISBN 0-8369-1471-6.
  25. ^ Raab, Earl (11 October 1974). "The Barnacle Goose and Other Jewish Monsters" (PDF). S. F. Jewish Bulletin.
  26. ^ "Barnacle Goose". The Medieval Bestiary. Retrieved 10 December 2016.

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