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by Karl Grossman |
āIād like to see them abandon this task that they are compelled to do,ā commented state Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele, Jr. last week about a new revised plan by the New York StateĀ Department of Environmental Conservation to go after mute swans, including possibly killing some.
āThe DEC should abandon this as not necessary,ā said Mr. Thiele of Sag Harbor. āTheir rationale to justify this makes no sense whatsoever.ā
With theĀ revised plan, said the assemblyman, āthe DEC is putting lipstick on a pig.ā
Three years ago, the DEC unveiled an outrageous plan to kill many of the 2,200 mute swans in the state. Most of the beautiful and graceful birds, some 1,600 are on Long Island.
The DEC claimed in advancing the plan to slaughter the elegant birds that they were an āinvasiveā species and thus should be destroyed. The reaction to the scheme by the public, environmentalists and members of the New York State Legislature ā Mr. Thiele and many other state lawmakers āwas loud and intense.
āReal stupidā said Larry Penny, a Long Island naturalist and formerly the longtime East Hampton Town director of natural resources and environmental preservation. Of swans being āinvasive,ā he said: āNonsense.ā They were brought to North America from Europe after the Civil War and ātheyāre not doing any harm,ā said Mr. Penny. Also, there āare natural checks on their population ā raccoons and foxes take them. Theyāre subject to a lot of pressure.ā
The State Legislature in 2014 and 2015 overwhelmingly passed bills to block the DECās kill-the-swans plan. But Governor Andrew Cuomo vetoed each of the measures.
Finally, last year he signed a measure requiring the DEC to provide more scientific justification for taking on swans, minimizing killing them and holding public hearings before moving ahead.
The just-released revised plan says the DEC will keep the population of mute swans downstate the size it is now. Eggs would be prevented from hatching through a process called āegg-addlingā which involves coating the eggs with corn oil.
Upstate, the number of mute swans would be reduced each year. The plan says ānon-lethalā means would be used upstate, if possible. āLess than 100ā mute swans āannuallyā would be captured upstate and sent to āDEC-licensed facilitiesā but if capture canāt be accomplished, the upstate mute swans would be killed.
Also, āDEC will evaluate the pros and cons of allowing waterfowl hunters to take mute swans.ā
The DEC calls this a āregionalized approach.ā
Says the plan: āDownstate, where mute swans have existed in a wild state for many decades, the DEC will work with cooperators conducting non-lethal mute swan control activities to minimize population growth in the region, primarily through egg-addling.ā
āUpstate, where the range expansion and introduction is more recent, DEC will be pro-active to mitigate the environmental impact of feral mute swans by preventing range expansion reducing or stabilizing the overall population over the next six years with an emphasis on non-lethal removal and nest treatments. Every effort will be made to use non-lethal management techniques, however, where necessary mute swans will be lethally removed.ā
For both upstate and downstate, āDEC will consider statewide regulations to prohibit the intentional feeding of wild mute swans and other waterfowl, similar to what was enacted to prohibit the feeding of bears in New York.ā
The newāand still outrageousā19-page plan is available on the DEC website.
In addition to the three public hearings, people can send written comments on the DEC scheme to: Bureau of Wildlife, Mute Swan Plan, 625 Broadway, Albany, NY 12233Ā orĀ email comments to Wildlife@dec.ny.gov and include on the subject line: āMute Swan Plan.ā
Assemblyman Thiele said that once the state Legislature reconvenes in January, lawmakers will consider the new DEC mute swan plan.
A recent DEC press release reads: āMute swans are likely to remain in most areas of Long Island, New York City, and the lower Hudson Valley where they have been seen for many years, but DEC will encourage non-lethal population controls to protect local wildlife and habitats and will authorize control measures to ensure that mute swans do not interfere with human interests.ā
DEC Commissioner Basil Segos is quoted as saying: “DEC’s revised draft management plan is responsive to the public’s concerns about complete elimination of mute swans from New York.ā
Doesnāt the DEC have anything better to do?
Photo: A mute swan at Argyle Lake in Babylon earlier this month. (Michael White)