It might seem to some that my posting from yesterday ("All Roads Leading  Here -- Extinction") might seem overly dramatic or exaggerated.
I would like to think that, too.
But, I can't.
It would certainly be reasonable to figure that if Canada goose  numbers were to drop precipitously in the  country  to near-extinction levels (as they did in the middle of  the last century) "wildlife biologists" and hunters would again take  immediate action to capture, clip wings and captively breed the geese as  they did to eventually bring us to the point we are at now.
Obviously, the federal "optimum population" of Canada geese is that  number which is suitable and sustainable for hunters to shoot at.
However, the problem is, that many geese apparently figured this out  and instead of putting themselves out in the rural skies for hunters to shoot  at, many instead fled to "safe" and protected areas like public parks, golf  courses, shopping malls or cemeteries. 
Apparently wildlife biologists didn't figure on the geese being clever and  adaptable. And apparently, wildlife biologists didn't figure either on the  geese being extremely exemplary parents, mating for life and protecting their  young like the crown jewels.
So now we have the situation of wildlife biologists essentially wanting  to undo their prior "mistake" of releasing  American-born Canada geese throughout the United States, where  the native geese essentially outsmarted our attempts to "manipulate,  manage, control" and now destroy a "game bird."
This would all be quite funny, if it weren't in fact so pathetic.
But, to quote, Dr. Phil:  "The best predictor of future behavior  is past behavior."
It seems there were many factors of bird behavior and natural  forces that wildlife biologists didn't consider when hatching their  plans to "restore" the dwindling populations of Canada geese that hunters and  destruction of natural habitat had almost entirely wiped out.
Why should we believe they are considering all factors now that effect  animal behavior, breeding patterns and abilities to actually procreate?
Factors (as pointed out yesterday) such as climate change and natural (and  not so natural) disasters?
Hundreds of oil spills, destruction of natural wetlands, droughts, floods,  earthquakes, wildfires, tsunamis, nuclear meltdowns, melting polar  caps, and tornados.    ALL of these are bound to adversely  effect wildlife populations.  Especially when they occur during natural  bird nesting periods.
Would we even recognize if an animal species population has become so  low that even our human attempts to "restore" numbers are insufficient  to achieve actual redemption?
Presently, many species of penguins are in danger of extinction due  primarily to humans over-fishing the birds' food supply (particularly,  sardines.)
Can we save the penguins?
Probably not.  
Because it would require serious restrictions on the human activity of  fishing.
Thousands of animal and plant species are currently going extinct  throughout the world.   
Most of them due to human destruction of rainforests, wetlands and  the rest of the natural environment.  (We call this "development"  but it could well represent a case of humans overpopulating.)
But, Canada geese are quite literally, in our own back yard of city parks  and urban areas.
Will we participate in and tolerate attempts at animal extinction in  our own neighborhoods?
Currently, at Prospect Park in Brooklyn (the site where 368 Canada geese  and their goslings were secretly rounded up and gassed last summer), there are  posted signs warning people to not feed waterfowl.  The signs warn of birds  potentially being "crowded" when in fact, there are hardly any geese at all on  the lake.
Community residents report less than 50 geese in the entire area of  Prospect Park. Yet, there are plans next month to send Border Collies to harass  and chase whatever geese are there, as well as plans to oil any eggs that any  hapless geese might dare to lay.
Kind of like Central Park sending out "Geese Relief" last November to  harass the birds out of Harlem Meer when there were in fact, less than 25 geese  on the entire lake. Most geese had already migrated south.   However, the goose harassment action DID "succeed" in chasing out all the  shovelers, mallards and even one swan from Harlem Meer.
I don't know what others might call irrational actions like these, but I  call them "Management to Extinction."
Apparently, the "optimum" population of resident Canada geese accepted in  many of our public parks, (especially, Prospect Park) is zero.
Management to zero, is in fact, management to extinction.  --  PCA
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