Pigeon
Quick Facts:
Height/Weight
12-15/10oz-16oz
Life Span
3-4 years in the wild up to 16 captivity
Flight
Speed
28 to 82 mph
Range
All fifty states Urban/ Suburban areas
Food
Widely varied, grains, seeds, corn human food scraps
Habitat
Protected ledges and roof-tops
Effective
Control Products
2 StealthNet, Birdwire, Bird-Flite, BirdCoil, Bird-Shock,
Trapping
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Damage
Caused
Pigeons are responsible for untold millions of dollars of damage each
year in urban areas. The uric acid in their feces is highly corrosive.
Also, debris from roosting flocks can build up, backing up gutters
and drains thus causing damage to roofs and other structures. Extensive
damage to air conditioning units and other roof top machinery is commonplace.
There are also other economic costs that can be associated from pigeons
taking up residence such as slip and fall liability and projection
of an unclean, dirty company image. Besides physical damage, the bacteria,
fungal agents and ectoparasites found in pigeon droppings sometimes
represent a health risk.
Control
There are a wide variety of solutions available for handling a pigeon
infestation. The best solution for pigeon problems, is complete exclusion
with a 2" mesh StealthNet.
Many ledge problems can be solved by using products such as BirdCoil,
Birdwire, Bird-Flite
spikes, as well as Bird-Shock
electrical track. When bird pressure is heavy in an area, exclusion
work must be accompanied by flock dispersal methods like trapping.
Flock dispersal alone is not solution, especially in medium-heavy
pressure situations like when there are food, water, shelter sources
at the site.
Nesting
Nest building is very simple and often consists of a few stiff twigs.
The male will pick the site. They prefer small flat areas away from
the ground. Look for nests along building ledges, bridge supports,
air conditioning units, window sills and the like. In crowded flocks,
pigeons will even forgo nest building and lay eggs directly on a protected
ledge.
Breeding
Pigeons are monogamous and a mating pair will typically have three
or four broods a year. The female will usually lay two or sometimes
three eggs at a time. The eggs are a solid bright white color. The
eggs take roughly 18 days to hatch and 35 more days before the fledglings
leave the nest.
Cycles
Pigeons are not migratory. Their natural instinct is to stay near
their birth site. This trait gives the pigeon a very determined
personality when it comes to roosting at a particular site. The
daily cycle of a pigeon is to roost at night, feed in the morning
and loaf in the afternoon. The seasonal cycle is as follows; courtship
in the early winter, nest building in late winter and breeding in
the spring. However, in warm climates, breeding will occur year
round. Pigeons molt once a year in late summer.
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