There may be more facts than you expected, but you got some extra facts!
The Lesser Snow Geese visiting the Sanctuary are part of the Wrangel Island (Pacific Flyway) nesting population. Wrangel Island lies in the Arctic Ocean, north of Siberia, and belongs to Russia. A "population" is the number of animals of the same type living in an area. Birds nesting on Wrangel Island split into two separate wintering sub-populations. One winters in California, and one winters locally.
Lesser Snow Goose Facts:
Weight: 2.5 to 2.7 kg Wingspan: 38- 46 cm Lifespan: 10 to 20 years in the wild.
Distinguishing marks: White bodies, black wing-tips, a pink bill with black markings and pink feet.
Best times to view them at the Sanctuary: mid-Oct. to mid-Dec. and mid-March to mid-April.
January 2011 Mid-winter count (Fraser River and Skagit River flocks)= 65,000 birds, with very few young of the year. 2010 was a porr nesting season with a decline in the population.
Fall 2011 forecast is for about 75,000 birds, with perhaps 25% young in the flock, but this will not be verified until the mid-winter count.
they nest in Canada and the artic,and winter in the southern u.s.
It also lives at the marshy areas,ponds,streams and lakes>
Usually on the ground in a field or in high mountains
Ducks and geese live near ponds and lakes. they live right around the edge so they can hatch there young and take them straight into the water to swim!
in the snow
siberia
It is too cold where they are so they fly south for the winter where it is warm.
Yes, the northern part of the snow goose's winter range is in southern New Mexico. They also migrate through the state in the spring and fall migration; they may or may not stop during this journey. Other bands of snow geese winter in other parts of the U.S. and further south but migrate through separate flyways. See : http://identify.whatbird.com/img/4/2808/image.aspx for a range map.
First the plural of "Goose" is "Geese". Geese "migrate", that is they fly North into the Arctic regions in Spring and South to temperate regions in Autumn. They do this because during the Arctic Summer, the Arctic wetlands are warmed by 24 hours of sunlight, the plants grow and the wetlands team with life that is food for the geese (also there are few predators). They therefore bread in the Arctic and raise their young over these summer months. Come Autumn/Winter the ground freezes over and snow covers the vegetation and food ceases to be available for the Geese. They therefore fly South for the Winter to more temperate climate regions where food is available.
Pretty well all species of ducks and geese (like Mallards, canvasbacks, pintails, eiders, grebes, Canada geese, snow geese, etc.) migrate south in the fall and fly north in the spring.
They have a very good eyesight and they migrate in winter.
snow bunny or snowbird
No. Snow geese are birds.
The snow geese mate during the second spring migration and stays with their parter for life. The snow geese mate during the second spring migration and stays with their parter for life.
Geese usually fly south for winter a few weeks before the season starts, so they have enough time to reach their destination without being hindered by snow storms and other hazards winter brings.
The healthy ones can. And so can healthy Mallards too.
Flight of the Snow Geese was created in 1972.