40
©Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust
Wildfowl
(2013) 63: 40–55
Autumn and spring migration of the Taiga Bean
Goose
Anser fabalis middendorffii
in northern
Japan from 2002 to 2012, with implications for
site conservation
HIROSHI IKAWA & MARIE-JO IKAWA
1-8-8-8-604 Hiragishi, Toyohira-ku, Sapporo 062-0931, Japan.
E-mail:
Abstract
The Taiga Bean Goose
Anser fabalis middendorffii
is classified as “near threatened”
(NT) on Japan’s Red List with
c
. 9,000 birds wintering in the country. The Sarobetsu
Plain, northern Hokkaido, is an important staging area for the geese migrating
between northeast Russia and Honshu, Japan. Over the period 2002–2011, peak
numbers staging at Sarobetsu each autumn ranged from 6,178–9,230 birds (mean ±
s.e. = 7,272 ± 267), suggesting that most Taiga Bean Geese wintering in Japan
migrate through Sarobetsu. The duration of autumn staging ranged from 51–87 days
(mean = 74 ± 3) across the years. Lakes Kabuto and Penke and the Teshio Oxbow
Lakes were the main autumn roost sites. In spring, peak numbers at the site varied
from 1,486–2,776 individuals (mean = 2,048 ± 140; 2002–2012), and the geese were
present for 23–50 days (mean = 35 ± 2). Peak numbers were significantly greater and
staging periods were always longer in autumn than in spring. The main spring roost
sites were the Furaoi Oxbow Lake and Lakes Penke and Kabuto, confirming the
latter two sites as the most important roosts in both autumn and in spring, whereas
Furaoi Oxbow Lake was used only in spring. Farmland surrounding these roosts is
also important to the birds, as the geese feed mostly in fields close to the roost sites.
Two core roosts, Lake Penke and the Furaoi Oxbow Lake, are suffering siltation and
adverse effects of fishery activities, which could adversely affect Taiga Bean Geese
wintering in Japan.
Key words:
Anser fabalis middendorffii
, Hokkaido, Sarobetsu, staging.
The Taiga Bean Goose
Anser fabalis
middendorffii
is designated as “near
threatened” (NT) on Japan’s Red List
(Ministry of the Environment of Japan
2006). The population breeds in the east
Transbaikal, Siberia and Kamchatka regions
of Russia and migrates to winter in eastern
China, Korea and Japan (Brazil 2009). Of