In suburban New England, gobbling gangs roam the streets. Wild Turkeys, each weighing in at 10 or 20 pounds, loiter in driveways, inside their homes. They lounge on decks, damage gardens, and jump on the car hoods. Flocks of 20 or 30 birds roost in backyards, while particularly plucky turkeys chase down mailmen and . They even fly () across highways; one left a turkey-size dent in an ornithologist鈥檚 windshield. So far in 2018, the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries & Wildlife, or MassWildlife, has received 150 turkey-related calls and complaints, primarily from residents of densely populated counties in the southeast and Cape Cod. These are the Wild Turkeys of New England, and they鈥檝e taken over.
The turkeys鈥 is a relatively recent phenomenon. Just 50 years ago, the Wild Turkey population in New England was essentially non-existent, and had been for over a century. Then, an extensive, coordinated effort to trap and transfer turkeys across state lines rejuvenated the population鈥攁 comeback lauded by wildlife biologists and agencies as a conservation triumph. 鈥淚t was an all-hands-on-deck restoration effort,鈥 says , a wildlife biologist at the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a fabulous success story.鈥 But now, with turkeys , agencies must find a balance between celebrating the Wild Turkey revival and ensuring that human and bird get along. 鈥淲e鈥檙e at opposite ends of the spectrum from where we were 50 years ago,鈥 says wildlife biologist , who leads the Turkey & Upland Game Project at MassWildlife. 鈥淚t鈥檚 gone from a conservation success story to a wildlife-management situation.鈥
Before Europeans first colonized New England in the 17th century, an stretched from southern Maine to Florida to the Rocky Mountains. As settlers spread out across the continent, they cut down forests as they went鈥攁nd New England took the biggest hit. Forest area decreased 70 to 80 percent in Massachusetts alone in the first half of the 19th century, says Jim Cardoza, a retired wildlife biologist who led the Turkey & Upland Game Project at MassWildlife during the 1970s conservation effort.
As a result, the birds lost not only the cover of their habitat but also their food supply of acorns and chestnuts. Without hunting restrictions, hunters picked off any Wild Turkeys that survived the deforestation. By the mid-1850s, New England鈥檚 turkeys had all but disappeared. In the 1930s, biologists released hundreds of captive-bred turkeys into the region to try and resuscitate the species, but these domesticated birds couldn鈥檛 survive in the wild.
In the 1960s, biologists began to explore the idea of trapping Wild Turkeys, primarily from New York, and transporting them for release in New England. Biologists like Cardoza and his team sat in their trucks on cold winter mornings, sometimes for eight hours, waiting for Wild Turkeys to follow the trail of cracked corn, wheat, and oats to an open farmyard or pasture. Once 20 or so birds had gathered, Cardoza fired a towards the gaggle to capture them before tagging the birds for relocation.
Massachusetts captured 37 Wild Turkeys from New York鈥檚 Adirondacks in the 1970s and released them in the Berkshires. Vermont relocated 31 New York turkeys in the mid-1960s, and Connecticut, Maine, and New Hampshire participated in . By that time, the New England human population had migrated and condensed into cities, and forests and food had returned to much of the abandoned farmlands. Turkey predators like cougars and wolves had been extirpated, and the entire region created hunting restrictions to protect the birds. All the while, trapping and relocation continued between and within states鈥攁nd soon New England鈥檚 Wild Turkeys, once considered extinct, were resurgent.
鈥淭heir population just exploded, quite literally,鈥 Bernier says. Today, the Wild Turkey population in Massachusetts . There are in Vermont, in New Hampshire, and almost 鈥攁lmost all of which descended from those few dozen relocated birds, Bernier says. They now cover more terrain than they did before they disappeared; some Wild Turkeys even filled in pockets of previously uninhabited land on their own, something that researchers didn鈥檛 expect. 鈥淭hey did better than anybody thought that they would,鈥 says , wildlife biologist with the National Wild Turkey Federation. The U.S. population is back up to roughly 6.2 million birds, he says.
In the mid-2000s, however, the turkeys started . New England is one of the most densely populated regions in the United States, and as people began putting out birdfeeders and growing gardens, turkeys found ample food. And the Wild Turkeys in suburbia, unlike skittish rural-roaming turkeys, quickly grew accustomed to humans. 鈥淣o one had any idea that these birds would be showing up in suburbs,鈥 says , the chief of information and education at MassWildlife. 鈥淭here was no precedent for it.鈥
Overall, locals don鈥檛 mind the company. Some eager residents even go out of their way to attract the birds by scattering nuts, seeds, and berries on background platforms or intentionally growing nut-producing trees. But that warm welcome sometimes fades as the turkey-human scuffles continue to mount, and residents claim that the .
Encounters with the four-foot-tall turkeys can be dangerous, especially to a . The birds can act aggressively towards humans by charging at them, pecking at them, or otherwise intimidating them. They also attack reflective surfaces that they mistake for other turkeys. That鈥檚 because the birds, usually male, are trying鈥攁nd succeeding鈥攖o establish themselves at the top of the town鈥檚 pecking order. 鈥淭his is the way they deal with socialization,鈥 Larson says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e treating people as if they鈥檙e turkeys.鈥
Outside of cities, Wild Turkey populations, such as in some southeastern and midwestern states, are on the decline as other forests are converted to farmland. But the urban birds continue to flourish in New England. Now wildlife agencies across the region are tasked with managing both the Wild Turkeys and their human neighbors to make sure encounters don鈥檛 go awry. The answer, biologists say, is simple: 鈥淲e just need to stop feeding them,鈥 Scarpitti says.
That鈥檚 what he tells local residents when he鈥檚 called to mediate neighborly disputes: Don鈥檛 feed the birds, and don鈥檛 show fear. But people hardly ever listen, and so for the foreseeable future, Wild Turkeys will continue to rule the neighborhoods of New England.