Current:Home > InvestA New York village known for its majestic mute swans faces a difficult choice after one is killed -AssetScope
A New York village known for its majestic mute swans faces a difficult choice after one is killed
View
Date:2025-04-16 20:22:21
MANLIUS, N.Y. (AP) — Elegant white swans have an outsize presence in this upstate New York village measuring less than 2 square miles. Their likeness is on village flags, community centers and welcome signs. “Swan Fest” is celebrated each fall.
Residents say it’s hard to imagine Manlius without the mute swans that have inhabited a pond in the village center for more than 100 years. Until recently, they didn’t have to.
But the violent killing of one of the village’s swans in 2023 set off a battle with regulators that is forcing Manlius to make a difficult decision about the birds’ future: it’s put the village that wants to keep them at odds with a state that views them as trouble.
By the end of the year, Manlius must choose: Keep its four existing mute swans but sterilize them, or retain only two of the same sex. Either option would end the village’s annual tradition of watching the swans hatch and raise cygnets, and could signal the beginning of the end of their presence in Manlius altogether.
“I don’t think they understand how important it is to this village,” said Mayor Paul Whorrall, a lifelong resident who as a boy passed the swans on his paper route and is loath to see them go under his watch. “If you take away the swans, you’re taking away a lot of the identity of the village.”
In recent years, New York has moved to limit the number of mute swans within its borders, managing them as an invasive species whose numbers have grown since they were brought over from Europe in the late 1800s. Before escaping or being released into the wild, the majestic birds with long curved necks beautified ponds on private estates in the lower Hudson Valley and on Long Island, where most of the swans — an estimated 2,200 — are still concentrated.
But the Department of Environmental Conservation says the huge birds disrupt ecosystems, degrade water quality with their waste and eat as much as 8 pounds (3.6 kilograms) of submerged vegetation daily. With wingspans of nearly 7 feet (2.1 meters) and weighing 20 to 25 pounds (9 to 11 kilograms), the swans have also had aggressive run-ins with people and displaced native wildlife.
Under a 2019 management plan, mute swans can only be possessed with DEC authorization.
Manlius had a license that was supposed to last through 2025, allowing it to uphold what had been the status quo: a pair of adult swans named Manny and Faye lived in the pond and each spring hatched cygnets, which were eventually transferred out of state before they were old enough to reproduce.
That all changed last year, when police say three Syracuse teenagers climbed a fence and took Faye and her four cygnets. The teens decapitated Faye, brought her to a relative to cook and ate her, police said. The babies were recovered and returned to the pond, but Manny behaved aggressively toward them and was sent to live in Pennsylvania.
Now, the four young swans, two male and two female, are the only ones in the pond.
That means Manlius no longer meets the terms of its license, which specifies that it possess two adult swans. A revised license allowing the village to have the four swans will run out at the end of this year.
With no chance that baby mute swans will come along, residents fear that the current options offered by DEC officials — sterilize all four or keep only one sex — will be the end of mute swans in Manlius. The agency has suggested breeding similar trumpeter swans instead, an option many oppose.
“I see no reason not to let them live here,” said village resident Martha Ballard Lacy, 89, who became enamored with Manny and Faye on her daily walks around the Manlius Swan Pond. Lacy frequently photographed the pair, which had been at the pond since 2010, as they tended to a nest of eggs.
“The town loves having a place to come to and identify themselves with something that’s been here for 100 years,” Lacy said.
The state has long wrestled with what to do about mute swans. In 2013, the DEC announced a goal of eliminating free-ranging mute swans in New York by 2025, but its plans to shoot or euthanize them and destroy their eggs drew public outcry.
Revisions followed and in 2019, the agency finalized its latest plan that, instead of elimination, aims to stabilize or reduce their numbers by nonlethal means like egg-addling — stopping fertilized eggs from developing — although the plan allows for killing swans that can’t be captured or relocated in some circumstances.
Whorrall doesn’t dispute that mute swans are problematic elsewhere. But he says disrupting the ones in Manlius will do nothing to solve the problem. The village’s swans are contained to the fenced-in pond where they have shelter and a specialized diet of vegetation and feed.
On a recent afternoon, a resident tossed cracked corn through the fence as the swans bobbed upside down to retrieve it.
“They really are fun to see, and families come and stop by,” Lacy said.
With the Dec. 31 deadline approaching, Whorrall said the village wants to maintain the status quo, saying leaders have done everything the state has asked, including installing educational displays at the pond. The village even agreed to sterilize any baby swans before removing them if it would save the breeding tradition, Whorrall said, but the DEC rescinded the option after raising it.
In a statement, the DEC said it “continues to work closely with the village of Manlius to ensure its possession of swans is wholly consistent with New York State and Atlantic flyway management objectives” outlined in a 17-state agreement to reduce the ecological impacts of the swans.
Village residents say the situation has made Faye’s death even more painful.
“People are going to cause crimes and and unfortunately that’s part of life, and you’ve got to just do what you can to move on,” Whorrall said. “And that’s what we’re doing, we’re trying to move on. And they’re making it hard to move on.”
veryGood! (241)
Related
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- How women finally got hip-hop respect: 'The female rapper is unlike any other entertainer'
- Ohio State moves up to No. 3 in NCAA Re-Rank 1-133 after defeat of Penn State
- The pope just opened the door to blessing same-sex couples. This nun secretly blessed one more than 15 years ago.
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Quick genetic test offers hope for sick, undiagnosed kids. But few insurers offer to pay.
- Marjory Stoneman Douglas High shooting site visited one last time by lawmakers and educators
- Tesla says Justice Department is expanding investigations and issuing subpoenas for information
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Got a Vivint or Ring doorbell? Here's how to make smart doorbells play Halloween sounds
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Taylor Swift's 'Eras' wins box office as 'Killers of the Flower Moon' makes $23M debut
- Names and ages of 5 killed written on scrap of paper show toll of Hamas-Israel war on Minnesota family
- Autoworkers strike at Stellantis plant shutting down big profit center, 41,000 workers now picketing
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- US Forest Service sued over flooding deaths in the wake of New Mexico’s largest recorded wildfire
- The yield on a 10-year Treasury reached 5% for the 1st time since 2007. Here’s why that matters
- Texas coach Steve Sarkisian provides update on quarterback Quinn Ewers' status
Recommendation
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
Michael Irvin calls out son Tut Tarantino's hip-hop persona: 'You grew up in a gated community'
James Patterson says checked egos are key to co-author success, hints at big actor collab
Even with carbon emissions cuts, a key part of Antarctica is doomed to slow collapse, study says
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
A Texas-sized Game 7! Astros, Rangers clash one final time in ALCS finale
Air France pilot falls 1,000 feet to his death while hiking tallest mountain in contiguous U.S.
Top Chinese diplomat to visit Washington ahead of possible meeting between Biden and Xi