Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Port Hopes To Reduce Gull Poop By Attracting Eagles To Fake Tree

The Canadian Press, 28 Mar, 2018 11:57 AM
    VICTORIA — John Briant has never grown accustomed to the scent that hundreds of gulls bring to Victoria's largest port.
     
     
    The general manager of Western Stevedoring, which manages Ogden Point, says it's just one problem that makes the species impossible to ignore — alongside blizzards of feathers and the constant threat of bird droppings.
     
     
    "It smells like rotten, dead fish, it's very gross. Especially, you know, when it doesn't rain for quite a long period of time. Then it will get hot and bake and the first little bit of rain we get, wets it," Briant said.
     
     
    "The smell is absolutely disgusting. It blows into the community and we get accused of it coming from the cruise ships. It's not, it's coming from the warehouse roof."
     
     
    Western Stevedoring spends between $20,000 and $30,000 each year cleaning up guano at Ogden Point, which doubles as a tourist attraction and deep-sea port, Briant said. That doesn't include the extra cost of warehouse roof repairs needed because the acidic poop corrodes its surface.
     
     
    After trying to deter the gulls over several years using everything from lasers to fake owls with bobbing heads, Briant said they are going to see if a novel solution will work.
     
     
    The company has installed a custom-built fake tree on top of the warehouse, with a steel trunk and dead tree branches.
     
     
    The goal? Attract the gulls' natural foes, bald eagles, to nest there.
     
     
    "We hope it works," Briant said.
     
     
    Jacques Sirois, chairman of the Friends of Victoria Harbour Migratory Bird Sanctuary, said dead trees are a natural roosting place for eagles. He came up with the idea to mount a tree on the rooftop.
     
     
    "I go to Ogden Point every day. When the bald eagles fly over, I would see 100 to 200 gulls flushing from the roof," he said.
     
     
    "The idea is that if we make the area more eagle friendly, it might become more gull unfriendly."
     
     
    It won't be the first of its kind. Sirois pointed to Habitat Island in Vancouver's False Creek as another location where dead tree snags have been strategically bolted in place to attract eagles.
     
     
    He said tall, dead trees were once a common sight along the coast, but municipalities tend to cut them down because they can pose safety hazards. 
     
     
    That didn't help the decline of bald eagle populations over the decades, he said, but now that they are rebounding, he'd like to see more dead trees — or stable structures — put in place so they have more places to roost.
     
     
    The glaucous-winged gull, on the other hand, may need some help too. While the most common gull of the Salish Sea may appear to be a pest, that's only because they're increasingly drawn into urban areas in search of food, he said.
     
     
    A 2015 University of British Columbia study found the population of seagulls in the Georgia Strait had dropped by half since the 1980s, due to declining food sources like herring.
     
     
    Sirois said scaring them off from Ogden Point won't leave them without a home, however, since there are wild gull habitats on nearby Trial Island and Chain Islets.
     
     
    "The gulls have somewhere to go," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Outrage After U.S. News Report Uses Image Of Sikh Man For Terrorism Story

    Outrage After U.S. News Report Uses Image Of Sikh Man For Terrorism Story
    U.S. News & World Report is in trouble over the use of photo of a turban-wearing Sikh soldier that accompanied the piece headlined “How Terrorism Is Taught Around The World.” Apparently the people were not happy. 

    Outrage After U.S. News Report Uses Image Of Sikh Man For Terrorism Story

    After Emergency Hospitalization, Conservative MP Todd Doherty Urges Politicians To Practise Self-Car

    After Emergency Hospitalization, Conservative MP Todd Doherty Urges Politicians To Practise Self-Car
    A British Columbia Conservative member of Parliament says the memory of his stricken wife's face as a medical crisis nearly killed him is his motivation for a heartfelt message to his colleagues, constituents and all Canadians.

    After Emergency Hospitalization, Conservative MP Todd Doherty Urges Politicians To Practise Self-Car

    23-Yr-Old Kalwinder Thind Dies After Trying To Break Up Nightclub Brawl

    23-Yr-Old Kalwinder Thind Dies After Trying To Break Up Nightclub Brawl
    Sgt. Jason Robillard says in a news release that the fight started at the Cabana Lounge at 1159 Granville Street around 2:30 a.m. Saturday, then spilled out onto the street.

    23-Yr-Old Kalwinder Thind Dies After Trying To Break Up Nightclub Brawl

    B.C. Health Officials Issue Overdose Alert Following Seven Deaths

    B.C. Health Officials Issue Overdose Alert Following Seven Deaths
    KELOWNA, B.C. — Health officials are urging B.C. residents to take extra caution when using drugs, following a string of suspected overdose deaths.

    B.C. Health Officials Issue Overdose Alert Following Seven Deaths

    Police Investigate After Trailer Full Of Beer Worth $155,000 Stolen In Delta

    Police Investigate After Trailer Full Of Beer Worth $155,000 Stolen In Delta
    Police in Delta, B.C., are investigating the theft of a trailer full of nearly 2,600 cases of Coors Light beer.

    Police Investigate After Trailer Full Of Beer Worth $155,000 Stolen In Delta

    Cambodia Arrests, Charges Two Canadian Women After 'Pornographic Dance'

    Cambodia Arrests, Charges Two Canadian Women After 'Pornographic Dance'
    PHNOM PEHN, Cambodia — Two Canadian women arrested among several foreigners in Cambodia are facing charges of producing pornographic photos during a party near the country's famed Angkor Wat temple.

    Cambodia Arrests, Charges Two Canadian Women After 'Pornographic Dance'