Extensive ornithological surveys were initiated in the summer
of 1973 on those islands in the Canadian High Arctic that are
likely to be affected by well drilling and pipeline routes resulting
from explorations for natural gas and oil. One of the projects
involved a thorough investigation of the numbers and distribution
of Brant (Brata bericla) on Melville Island and adjacent terri-
tory known collectively as the Queen Elizabeth Islands. To obtain
data on the distribution of these Brant on their wintering areas,
a number of geese were banded. This involved the capture of
flightless young and molting adult geese by setting up a portable
net corral and driving the birds into it with a helicopter (Heyland,
1970). In 1973, only standard numbered aluminum leg-bands were
used, but in 1974 painted aluminum neck-collars were also placed
on the birds. The collars were yellow with black lettering as devel-
oped by C. D. Macinnes ctal. (1969). Table I records the extent
of banding in 1973-74, and the numbers of Brant leg-banded by
Heyland in 1971 and 1972.
The first indications that any light-bellicd Brant (B. b. hrota)
nesting in the High Arctic of North America wintered in Europe
came in 1971 when two adults banded by Heyland on S August
1971 at Okse Bay, Ellcsmcre Island (77 ø 07 N, S7 ø 53' W) were
recovered in Northern Ireland: one at Lough Ncagh (54 ø 57' N,
06 ø 00' W) and the other at Strangford Lough, Co. Down (54 ø
30' N, 5 ø 40' W). A band from a third goose from this catch was
found at Ballina, Co. Mayo, Eire (54 ø 30' N, 9 ø 10' W) in August
1973. Another flock of Brant was banded at Oksc Bay on 6 August
1973. An adult male was subsequently recovered at Brhal, France
(4S ø 50' N, 1 ø 30' E) on 24 February 1974. On 2 February 1974,
a light-bcllicd Brant banded at Bracebridge Inlet at Bathurst
Island on 30 July 1972 was recovered at Samish Bay, Wastfington
(48 ø 30' N, 122 ø 40' W). A light-bcllicd Brant, banded by Maltby-
Prcvctt on Bathurst Island on 4 August 1973, was found dead at
Lough .Ncagh, Ireland on 16 October 1973. The details of these
recoveries are summarized in Table 2.
The Brant found in the western Arctic islands are largely inter-
mediate in belly-color between the very dark B. b. orientalis as
defined by Dclacour (1954), and the light B. b. hrota. Their status
will be dealt with elsewhere (Boyd and Maltby-Prcvctt in prep).
Here it is sufficient to record that 22 of the Brant banded on Mel-
ville Island and two of those banded on Prince Patrick Island were
shot on the Pacific coast of the U.S.A. in the winter of 1973-74;
none of these was very light-bellicd, most being "intermediate"
in color.
In September 1974 at Hjorscy in Myrar, S. W. Iceland (64 ø
32' N, 22 ø 1S' W), James Wilson (pcrs. comm.) saw neck-collared
156] Maltby-Prevett, Boyd, and Heyland Bird-Banding
Spring 1975
Vol. 46. No. 2 Migratio of Brad [157
Brant on three different occasions and was able to read the symbols
identifying 23 individuals. On 7 and 8 September he saw 23 with
yellow collars among ca. 3,500 Brant; on the 14th he saw 13 in
spite of being able to scrutinize only part of the 4,000 geese present;
on the 15th he saw 11 with collars. Not all of the symbols were
easily identifiable because the paint used was inadequate and
some symbols were worn away. The numbers read showed that
22 of the geese had been banded on Axel Heiberg Island in 1974.
The other, an adult female, was one of 38 banded east of Chad's
Point, Melville Island (76 ø 11' N, 109 ø 35' W) on 18 July 1974.
Of the geese from Axel Heiberg, eight were from 23 marked at
Surprise Fiord (78 ø 17' N, 90 ø 45' W) on 26 July; the remaining
13 were 51 neck-collared at South Fiord (79 ø 27' N, 94 ø 20' W) on
27 July. The numbers seen were thus in similar proportion to the
numbers marked on the two days. The geese from the two banding
sites, some 120 nailes apart, had remained partially segregated.
On 7 September all eight individuals identified were from South
Fiord: four seen 14 September were also from South Fiord, two
of them being closely associated with the Melville Island birds.
Nine identified on the 15th in a group feeding closely together
included seven from Surprise Fiord and two from South Fiord.
An adult female from South Fiord observed on the 15th had
also been seen on the 7th in the same group as two South Fiord
yearling females not noted with it on the 15th, but recorded as
probable siblings at the time of marking. Evidence of continuing
family groupings of Brant beyond the first winter is difficult to
obtain, but it is likely that family bonds in 1973 were especially
liable to persist through the summer of 1974 because of the virtual
absence of breeding effort that year by mature Brant in the Queen
Elizabeth Islands. Heavy snowfalls during the winter and spring
and a cold spring left the ground covered with snow well past the
usual period of nest initiation, and as a consequence very few
pairs attempted to nest.
The current wintering population of Brant in Ireland consists
of 10-14,000 birds (R. F. Rutfledge, pers. comm.). It is not likely
that light-bellied Brant breeding in Spitsbergen make up a signifi-
cant portion of this population, because they winter in Denmark
and along the North Sea coast as far as northeast England (Salo-
monson, 1958). Hitherto there had been no evidence to suggest
that the geese seen in Ireland were from the Greenland-Canada
rather than the Spitsbergen stock. The regular occurrence of
light-bellied Brant in northeast France has only recently been
recognized, and the numbers involved are believed to be small
(A. St. Joseph, pers. comm.).
The numbers of Brant now known to occur in northern Greenland
and in the eastern Queen Elizabeth Islands fall far short of the
numbers seen in leeland and Ireland. Although a few nest in
Peary Land and Hall Land, there is no evidence of large movements
along the northeast coast of Greenland. The majority of the
geese from Iceland fly across the Greenland ice cap from the Ang-
magssalik District in the southeast to the middle of the west coast,
PATRICK
8O*
AXEL HEISERG
STATUTE MILES
/
/
TO
FtGu 1. Banding locations, recovery sites and migration routes of Brant
breeding in the Canadian Arctic Islands.
Banding locations: 1. Chad's Point, 2. Bracebridge Inlet, 3. Surprise Fiord,
4. South Fiord, 5. Okse Bay.
Recovery sites: a. Br6hal, b. Strangford Lough, c. Lough Neagh. d. Ballina,
e. Reykjavik.
ß ß ß ß ß Spring migration of Brant
Fall migration of Brant
III Fall and spring migration of Brant
then move north to nesting sites north from Melville Bugt (Salo-
monsen, 1967). Further searches and banding in both Greenland
and Canada are needed to find all the geese wintering in Ireland
and to discover whether any of the Brant wintering on the U.S.
Atlantic coast come from breeding areas also supplying birds to
Ireland. Brant hunting seasons have been closed on the U.S.
Atlantic coast for four years, thus precluding large numbers of
hunter-reported bands from there. However, the fact that there
have been no recoveries of our banded Brant reported from this
area does not eliminate it as a wintering ground for these geese.
Probably most Brant from the western islands (Melville and
Prince Patrick) winter on the U.S. Pacific coast and the majority
of Brant from the eastern islands (Axel Hciberg and Ellesmere)
winter in Europe. The dividing linc between the two populations
may be on a north-south line through Bathurst Island because
Brant from the latter have been recovered in both wintering areas.
The lack of previous proof that Brant from northern Canada
visit Iceland on passage to Ireland is in part due to the small num-
bers of Brant banded in the northern islands and also to a lack of
any tradition of goose shooting in western Iceland. As a result
leg-banded birds are relatively unlikely to be detected there.
There is also a reduced probability of band reports from Ireland
where Brant have received total legal protection for some years
and where 3 of 4 recoveries come from such atypical localities as
Lough Neagh, over 25 miles inland from the nearest major marine
wintering area in Strangford Lough.
The expansion of the visible marking projec and he use of
improved patterns of neck-collars now being developed should
lead to more data on the range of different stocks of Brant, in-
cluding the possible overlapping in the north of geese wintering on
the U.S. Atlantic coast, in Ireland, and on the Pacific coast.
SUMMARY
At least 23 of 289 Brant marked with yellow neck-collars in the Queen Elizabeth Islands, N.W.T., Canada, in July and August 1974 were seen in western Iceland in September 1974, providing the first proof that Brant from the Canadian High Arctic visit Iceland en route to winter quarters in Ireland. All but one of the geese seen had been marked on Axel Heiberg Island, the other had come from Melville Island. Four leg-banded, light-bellied Brant from Ellesmere and Bathurst Island had earlier been recovered in Northern Ireland, and one in northwest France. Legal protection afforded the geese in Iceland, Ireland, and (temporarily) on the U.S. Atlantic coast greatly reduces the chance of geese without visible markings being reported from these parts of their range. Improved neck-collar designs and coloring will facilitate observations of Brant movements in the future. There appears to be a dichotomy in the autumn migration of High Arctic Brant, eastern birds travelling to Europe and those from the western islands migrating to the U.S. Pacific coast.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The study was supported financially in 1971, 1972, and 1973 by
the Canadian and Quebec Wildlife Services and the Eastern Can-
ada Cooperative Waterfowl Banding Fund and in 1974 by the
Canadian Wildlife Service. We sincerely thank Mobil Oil of
Canada Ltd. for helicopter and logistic support at Okse Bay in
1972. We are grateful to Chris Zinkan, party chief of the Ground
Survey Geological Program of Imperial Oil for logistic support on
Axel Heiberg Island and to Pat McLaren of Geological Survey of
Canada for logistic support at Conserr Head on Melville Island
in 1974. We were extremely thankful to our pilots Gene Vinet
(1971) Skyrotors, Marcel Marccntcnio (1972), Grant Wyatt
(1973) Klondike Helicopters, and Vic Corrie and engineer, Bob
Johnson (1974) Okanagan Helicopters all of whom volunteered
to help us with various measurements, leg-banding, neck-banding,
and recording of Brant during the operations. The Polar Con-
tinental Shelf Project, Resolute, provided lodging for some of the
banding crew members during each season and for this we arc
most grateful. Andrew St. Joseph was a great help to us during
all phases of banding in 1974.
We are particularly indebted to James Wilson who supplied us
with all the observations of neck-collared Brant in Iceland.
LITERATURE CITED
D.:LacorrR, J. 1954. Waterfowl of the world. Vol. I. London, Country Life.
M^clssEs, C. D., J.P. PREVTT, ^S) H. A. E)s3/4. 1969. A versatile collar
for individual identification of geese. J. Wildl. Manage., 33: 333-335.
S..OONSS, F. 1958. The present status of the Brant Goose in Western Europe.
Viderisk. Medd. dansk naturh. Foren, 120: 43-50.
---1967. Fuglene pa Gronland. Kobenhavn Rhodos.
L. S. Maltby-Prevett and H. Boyd, Canadian, Wildlife Service,
Eastern, Region Environ,rner, t Canada, 2721 Highway 31, Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada, KIA OH3. J. D. Heyland, Quebec Wildlife Ser-
vice, P.O. Box 7200, Orsainville, Quebec, Canada, GIG 5E5. Re-
ceived 6 November 1974, accepted 13 larch 1975.