Plan to kill woodpeckers stirs controversy in Walnut Creek
Published: Sunday, November 16, 2008 at 4:24 a.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, November 16, 2008 at 6:19 a.m.
A Walnut Creek retirement community where deer nibble on lawns and wild turkeys strut across the golf course is calling in a hit man to shoot woodpeckers that drill into homes to stash acorns.
Two Rossmoor homeowners associations are bringing in a federal hunter after receiving U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service permits to kill up to 50 acorn woodpeckers on the condition that nonlethal methods are tried first.
Some residents are upset, but the homeowners groups contend they have installed nets, hawk squawk boxes, owl decoys and battery-operated spiders, and yet homes are still getting drilled by the birds.
"People here don't want to shoot them, but after spending eight years and $170,000 without success, the homeowner groups don't know what else to do," said Maureen O'Rourke, a Rossmoor spokeswoman. "The birds can do a lot of damage."
Some residents are unhappy about the plan to kill the birds.
"We should find a way to live with wildlife without killing them," said Molly Mullikin, a Rossmoor resident.
The shooting is expected to start within a week or two once the hunter, who works as a nuisance wildlife controller for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is available.
The license to kill -- called a depredation permit -- was granted in June and is good for one year under federal rules aimed at balancing the needs of wildlife and protecting human crops and property, said Al Donner, a spokesman for the Fish and Wildlife Service.
The permit allows killing by a shotgun, pellet gun or snap trap.
If Rossmoor wants another permit next summer, the federal agency will reassess the situation and what nonlethal measures were taken, Donner said.
Duke Robinson, a Rossmoor resident, said he has mixed feelings about the woodpeckers. The birds drilled many holes into the side of his hillside house before moving onto other wood targets about three years ago.
"I don't like the idea of killing the woodpeckers, but I don't know else can be done," he said. "It's a dilemma with no easy solution."
To protect Robinson's house, his homeowners association installed sound-activated spiders, which scared away the birds, he said. But when the spider batteries went dead, the homeowners association did not replace them, Robinson added.
Gary Beeman, a Lafayette biologist who hires himself out to control wildlife problems, said he has used the spiders to scare off woodpeckers with "90 percent" success at many homes.
Beeman said Rossmoor maintenance managers told him that it required too much labor for someone to climb up a ladder to change the batteries of spiders mounted in high places on buildings. However, Beeman said he has set up spiders so they can be easily lowered on a string for battery replacement.
All rights reserved. This copyrighted material may not be re-published without permission. Links are encouraged.
Comments are currently unavailable on this article