EU German town votes to kill all pigeons

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German town votes to kill all pigeons​

Residents of Limburg-an-der-Lahn have voted to wipe out every single pigeon in the German town, claiming the bird population has grown out of control and become a severe nuisance.

According to the news outlet Der Spiegel, the local administration has been flooded with complaints about the flying pests, whose numbers surged during the Coronavirus pandemic. Residents say the birds’ droppings are wreaking havoc on outdoor restaurant areas and fouling up balconies.

In a public referendum held on Sunday, the same day that Germans voted in the EU Parliament election, over 53% of the town’s population – a total of 7,530 people – supported a mass cull of the pigeons. The results, according to Mayor Marius Hahn, were “unexpected.”

“The citizens have made use of their right and decided that the animals should be reduced by a falconer,”
Hahn told Der Spiegel.

The chosen method of eliminating the birds, which was originally proposed by the town’s council last year, involves the use of a falconer who will be tasked with luring the pigeons into a trap, hitting them over the head with a wooden stick to stun them, and then breaking their necks.

The cull is set to be carried out over the next two years.

Meanwhile, the city administration has also proposed setting up special “pigeon houses”where the birds would be encouraged to make their nests while their eggs would be replaced with dummies made of plaster and plastic. However, Berthold Geis, the falconer hired for the culling, has argued that this method would not work – and would instead attract more animals from surrounding areas.

Limburg’s decision has caused outrage among animal rights groups, which have called the town’s administration a “gang of murderers”and “human scum” and reportedly even issued death threats to the falconer hired to carry out the cull.

“We live in 2023, it can’t be that we kill animals just because they annoy us, or they’re a nuisance. That’s not acceptable,” Limburg city pigeon project manager Tanya Muller told Sky News last year when the town initially made the proposal.
 
Gonna have to add to this list soon.

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Pigeons aren't even 'wild' birds, they're all feral (in the case of the rock doves). Pretty much all of them come from ones that were dumped/released after WW1/2 and similar, which is why they often seem to show no fear around humans and can easily be 're-tamed' in the same way you would take in a feral cat or dog.
They are also very resistant to bird flu, and any other diseases they could potentially cause are only given via direct exposure to their nests/droppings over a long period of time (usually caused by a mold developing, not the pigeons themselves).
Better solutions would be to make more secure bins, clean up the streets more, and provide alternative nesting sites for pigeons so they don't choose to roost on buildings.
I'd rather have cities full of pigeons than have an increase in actual vermin animals, such as rats, cause something will have to fill the gap of 'eating dropped crumbs'.
I was prepared to shit all over this comment and then I read it and I feel you.

I do have to make one clarification: They're indigenous to Europe and they have spread around the world with the European diaspora because they were considered useful to the European peoples who moved there.

They're considered semi-useless now but you should read "Operation Columba" to get educated about how useful they once were.

They're basically a marker of civilization. As or more useful than the chicken, but not as commercially viable.

You step to the pigeon, you step to me.
 
The chosen method of eliminating the birds, which was originally proposed by the town’s council last year, involves the use of a falconer who will be tasked with luring the pigeons into a trap, hitting them over the head with a wooden stick to stun them, and then breaking their necks.
Rejected ideas included jerking the pigeons off to death and making them stand on a metal floor that was lowered into water while a high-voltage current was passed through it, both methods being deemed 'wholly impractical and unworkable'.

Perhaps they could just hire some of those pigeon-eating catfish to take care of things.
 
Rejected ideas included jerking the pigeons off to death and making them stand on a metal floor that was lowered into water while a high-voltage current was passed through it, both methods being deemed 'wholly impractical and unworkable'.

Perhaps they could just hire some of those pigeon-eating catfish to take care of things.
Ah, but did they consider loading the pigeons into carts and driving them into an oven? Bet they didn't think of that.
 
You heard it here folks: covid causes pigeons. That, or, less people at work means more people to notice/leave trash for the birds.

Can't wait to see which pest population explodes or predator population dissappears due to this not at all overreaction.

Pigeons aren't a natural member of the ecosystem. They were domesticated before almost any other domesticated animal, and the ones in cities are ferals. If your city was overrun by feral dogs or cats, you'd also need a cull.
 
I was prepared to shit all over this comment and then I read it and I feel you.

I do have to make one clarification: They're indigenous to Europe and they have spread around the world with the European diaspora because they were considered useful to the European peoples who moved there.

They're considered semi-useless now but you should read "Operation Columba" to get educated about how useful they once were.

They're basically a marker of civilization. As or more useful than the chicken, but not as commercially viable.

You step to the pigeon, you step to me.

One point of fact, they are indigenous to Europe, but not to Germany. As such, the ones in question are likely ferals, and are not natives.

However, I do take issue with their chosen method of execution. It sounds brutal and non-humane. The Germans seriously couldn't come up with a better method? Also, if reducing their population using dummy eggs would encourage migration from surrounding areas, wouldn't the same be true for wholesale extinction? Wouldn't the space that once belong to the extirpated birds just be taken over by others from the surrounding areas? Or do they plan to keep this going until they manage to exterminate all the pigeons that come into the area until it stops? It sound like a Sisyphean act. I honestly just don't see this turning out well for any of the individuals or animal involved. Of course, if there is one group of people determined enough to exterminate a group they find undesirable, it's the Germans, so, it might be worth sitting back and watching the show.
 
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Pigeons aren't a natural member of the ecosystem. They were domesticated before almost any other domesticated animal, and the ones in cities are ferals. If your city was overrun by feral dogs or cats, you'd also need a cull.
Actually pidgeons boomed in population because the buildings humans have built facilitate safe nesting.
 
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