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Author Wires, Linda R., author.

Title The double-crested cormorant : plight of a feathered pariah / Linda R. Wires ; with original illustrations by Barry Kent MacKay ; Sonia Shannon, design
Published New Haven, Connecticut : Yale University Press, 2014
©2014

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Description 1 online resource (368 pages) : illustrations
Contents Part I. What are cormorants? Aristotle's raven : an introduction to cormorants -- The double-crested cormorant -- Part II. The populations and the perceptions, then and now. European colonization and the making of a pariah -- From Audubon to conservation : the first wave of recovery -- Reversal of fortunes : another decline and the second recovery -- Part III. The economic and political landscape of the cormorant, 1965 to the present. Fish ponds and reservoirs : the context for conflict on the wintering grounds -- Animal damage control and the first standing depredation order for cormorants -- Conflicts on the breeding grounds -- The second standing depredation order for cormorants -- A half million and counting : implementation of management policies in the United States -- Looking north to Canada : limitations to management beyond the 49th parallel -- Part IV. The science, management, and ethics of today : review and critique. Untangling the mysteries between predator and prey -- Adaptive management : a process gone awry -- Back to the wintering grounds : liberties with science and policy -- Engineer or destroyer : the case of the catastrophic ecosystem flip -- Opening Pandora's box : some ethical implications of cormorant management -- Afterword : what future for cormorants?
Summary The tragic history of the cormorant's relations with humans and the implications for today's wildlife management policy The double-crested cormorant, found only in North America, is an iridescent black waterbird superbly adapted to catch fish. It belongs to a family of birds vilified since biblical times and persecuted around the world. Thus it was perhaps to be expected that the first European settlers in North America quickly deemed the double-crested cormorant a competitor for fishing stock and undertook a relentless drive to destroy the birds. This enormously important book explores the roots of human-cormorant conflicts, dispels myths about the birds, and offers the first comprehensive assessment of the policies that have been developed to manage the double-crested cormorant in the twenty-first century. Conservation biologist Linda Wires provides a unique synthesis of the cultural, historical, scientific, and political elements of the cormorant's story. She discusses the amazing late-twentieth-century population recovery, aided by protection policies and environment conservation, but also the subsequent U.S. federal policies under which hundreds of thousands of the birds have been killed. In a critique of the science, management, and ethics underlying the double-crested cormorant's treatment today, Wires exposes "management" as a euphemism for persecution and shows that the current strategies of aggressive predator control are outdated and unsupported by science
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Double-crested cormorant -- North America
Double-crested cormorant -- Economic aspects -- North America
Bird pests -- North America
Human-animal relationships -- North America
Bird pests
Double-crested cormorant
Human-animal relationships
North America
Form Electronic book
Author MacKay, Barry Kent, 1943- artist.
ISBN 9780300188264
0300188269