Science Cities Are Testing Birth Control to Solve Pigeon Problems - Booming populations of these familiar urban birds are causing complaints. Can contraception help?

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Rock Pigeons feasting in Toronto. Photo: Still The Oldie/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

The people of Toronto are fed up with pigeons. The birds crowd around subway stations, overload balconies with poop, and build their flammable nests in hazardous places. The city has tried trapping and relocating them, scaring them away with falcons, and even debated imposing a feeding ban. Nothing has worked.

The latest tactic? Giving the birds food laced with birth control.

Toronto is far from the only city dealing with pigeon problems. Adaptable and prolific, Rock Pigeons are extremely common—and often despised. City health and sanitation departments caution that pigeon droppings can damage buildings and historic landmarks, and their nests can cause fires on train tracks. This has prompted culling, trapping, or poisoning programs, but pigeon numbers keep bouncing back, pushing some civic leaders to seek more creative solutions.

Now Toronto is placing its bet on a form of avian birth control called nicarbazin. Nearly a year ago, the animal control department deployed four feeders around the city that automatically dispense nicarbazin-infused wheat pellets at a set time each day. The pilot program aims to reduce the metropolitan pigeon population by 50 percent annually—and results are set for release later this summer.

Nicarbazin was originally developed in the 1950s to treat a poultry disease called coccidiosis. But the drug came with a curious side effect: It made hens lay infertile eggs. The compound pokes holes in the membrane around the yolk, and so the embryo can’t develop, says Christi Yoder, a former wildlife biologist who helped conduct early research on the contraceptive capabilities of nicarbazin in the early 2000s. The drug was first tested in the laboratory with chickens and domestic Mallards, and then later in the field on nuisance Canada Geese, both scenarios where nicarbazin performed quite well, Yoder says.

For pigeons, however, the results have been mixed. The drug has had some success, especially with smaller pigeon populations confined to areas like industrial lots or small towns. But the right conditions need to align for nicarbazin to do its job. Pigeons can be conditioned to return to the same places at the same time each day, but ensuring that the birds eat the necessary dose isn’t always guaranteed, especially when other food is available. And if a bird stops consuming the drug for a few days, its fertility will return to normal. “You gotta be taking this stuff consistently for it to work,” says Erick Wolf, CEO of Innolytics, LLC, which sells nicarbazin under the brand name OvoControl, including for Toronto’s pilot.

That fickleness makes nicarbazin especially challenging to use effectively in cities. A 2022 study in Barcelona found that, while the drug reduced some pigeon colonies by about 55 percent over 3 years, other colonies appeared unaffected. This is likely because of humans. In areas where people feed pigeons, the birds may not always eat the birth-control bait, says Carlos González-Crespo, the lead author of the paper who is currently a researcher at University of California Davis. A separate study on nicarbazin in Barcelona also found that the drug had little effect on the overall population of pigeons across the city, likely because of these confounding human factors.

Giving pigeons birth control also seems to merely stabilize populations rather than decrease them, says Nadia Xenakis, a biologist at BC SPCA who led a year-long study in 2019 on a pilot program in Vancouver. That’s because contraception impacts fertility but not survival. A pigeon’s typical lifespan is two to seven years, so bringing down the numbers solely using nicarbazin can be a waiting game, she says. And for the duration, feeders must be monitored to make sure that pigeons are eating enough for a proper dose and cleaned regularly so they don’t attract rats and other pests. (Nicarbazin poses little risk to those animals, Wolf says, because of its specific effect on bird eggs and its daily dosage requirement.)

All of which raises the question: With its many uncertainties, is birth control the most effective way to reduce urban pigeon populations? The answer, experts agree, is no; stopping people from feeding the birds would likely have a bigger impact. “Many studies for urban pigeons are like, if you’re just reducing the food available to them, their populations will reduce by 50 percent before you even try contraceptives,” says Page Klug, a U.S. Department of Agriculture biologist who led a recent review paper on avian contraceptives.

The problem is that human behavior is difficult to manage. González-Crespo recalls how challenging it was to stop city residents from feeding pigeons for his study, since they thought that they were doing a good deed. In reality, feeding the birds can harm them, he says, by leading to overcrowding and unsanitary conditions.

Indeed, it was opposition to a feeding ban that ultimately led Toronto to try the approach the press has dubbed “planned pigeonhood.” Although the program’s impact won’t be clear until the summer, the city recently added a fifth birth control dispenser in a new location. Officials are also encouraging residents to seal off food sources and potential nesting nooks. Pigeon problems can’t be solved with contraceptives alone, González-Crespo says. “You cannot expect wonders from doing just one thing.”

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They controlled the passenger pigeon population too well, once upon a time.
 
They are making the birds gay instead of arresting the retards feeding them.
Even if those retards did fuck off, the overflowing trash and general shit stained nature of urban hellholes would still make for an ideal environment for sky rats.
 
You really want to eat the meat from a bird that lives off city garbage?
People saw maggots in cheese and said 'Mmmmm, that looks like something I wanna stick in my mouth.' People saw fungus that made corn grow gross tumors and eagerly popped those gross little bloated black nuggets into their mouth and said 'Yum.'

Whom am I to say city-fed birdy boobs can't be tasty?
 

This guy killed a over a hundred in two hours with a pellet rifle. Sounds like a far more reliable and quicker solution than BC for bird brains.
 
People saw maggots in cheese and said 'Mmmmm, that looks like something I wanna stick in my mouth.' People saw fungus that made corn grow gross tumors and eagerly popped those gross little bloated black nuggets into their mouth and said 'Yum.'

Whom am I to say city-fed birdy boobs can't be tasty?
Because garbage fed animals are known to taste like shit and are likely contaminated with shit you really don't want to be eating.
 
People saw maggots in cheese and said 'Mmmmm, that looks like something I wanna stick in my mouth.' People saw fungus that made corn grow gross tumors and eagerly popped those gross little bloated black nuggets into their mouth and said 'Yum.'

Whom am I to say city-fed birdy boobs can't be tasty?
Don't you diss huitlacoche!
 
You hear of threatened owl species dying because they ate rodents that someone poisoned.

Wonder what could happen if you spike the pidgies with hormones?
 
Baiting with toxic contraceptives will be a disaster, other birds will eat it and it’ll seep into the food chain.
You need to stop feeding the fuckers AND COLLECT THE FUCKING BINS more than once a millennium.
Here it’s trash on the streets and it’s less pigeons than seagulls and rats. Dodgy chicken and kebab vendors leaving meat everywhere equals rat heaven. Trash piling up on the street and discarded takeaways is what the birds feed on. You’ve never lived until you’ve walked past a pile of trash in the city at 4am and seen it shaking before a maelström of rat and gull fights erupts from it. Sometimes followed by a cheeky urban fox
Pick up the trash. I dont know what canadas like but the uk councils are trying to save money by reducing trash pickup frequency. It used to be almost daily in the city, then it was once a week and now it’s whenever they feel like it. There are often bin strikes and mountains of it pile up. Leaving bins full for two weeks plus in hot summers is disgusting and a public health issue
I sincerely believe that refuse collectors are a hundred thousand times more valuable than politicians.
A lot of the football stadiums have falconers. Maybe that’s a better bet
 
https://youtube.com/watch?v=vWO2KU0vMbQ
This guy killed a over a hundred in two hours with a pellet rifle. Sounds like a far more reliable and quicker solution than BC for bird brains.
They even make biodegradable airsoft pellets.

Much better than leaching more hormones in the environment. I swear hormonal birth control in the environment will turn out worse than all the other industrial waste leaching out in the environment.
 
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