The St. Lawrence River Double-crested Cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus
) population grew from 6,155 breeding pairs in 1979 to 17,854 in 1988.
Ground-nesting birds made up 54% of the population (374+/-70SE in 21
colonies) and tree-nesting ones the remainder (92+/-338SE in seven col
onies). Deterministic modeling led to a forecast of 27,000 pairs in 19
93. In order to halt further damage to unique and restricted insular f
orest ecosystems, a five-year culling program was introduced in 1989 w
ith the following goals: to reduce the breeding population to 10,000 p
airs and to discourage tree-nesting. Modeling revealed that these goal
s could only be attained by lowering recruitment (egg-spraying) in acc
essible ground nests and by reducing the number of adults in inaccessi
ble forest habitats al the same time. The dual approach-spraying 75% o
f all nests (5,051+/-279SE/y) with inert mineral oil in ground-nesting
colonies and culling (1,979+/-66SE/y) breeding birds in arboreal ones
-has since reversed population trends. By 1991, three years after the
beginning of the program, the estuarine population fell to 12,000 pair
s. Periodic control measures Mill be needed at the end of the five-yea
r program to maintain the population at the 10,000 pairs level.