There are three original populations of barnacle geese, with separate breeding and wintering ranges. Since the 1960s, two new breeding populations have established themselves, both located along
migration routes of two of the original populations. The five populations are: • Breeding in eastern
Greenland, wintering on the
Hebrides of western
Scotland and in western
Ireland. Population increased from about 7,000 individuals in the 1960s to 44,000 in 2011. • A recently established population, derived from the Greenland population, has bred more-or-less regularly in
Iceland since 1964. The population has rapidly increased in the last few decades, with more than 4000 breeding pairs in 2024. They winter in the same area as Greenland population. • Breeding on
Svalbard,
Norway, and wintering almost entirely in
Solway Firth on the England/Scotland border, with small numbers elsewhere in the region, particularly around
Budle Bay in Northumberland. This population increased from a few hundred individuals in the 1940s to about 34,000 in 2004, and 40,000 by the start of the 2020s. • Breeding on
Novaya Zemlya,
Dolgy Island,
Kanin Peninsula,
Yugorsky Peninsula and the
Barents Sea coastline in the Russian Arctic, wintering in the
Wadden Sea area in southwest
Denmark, northwest
Germany and the
Netherlands. Increased from about 70,000 individuals in 1980 to 1.2 million individuals in 2015. • A recent population, derived from the Russian population along with escaped captive birds, has become established since 1971; breeding on islands in the
Baltic Sea, and on islands and coasts of the southern
North Sea (
Estonia,
Finland,
Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, Germany and
Belgium). Winters in or near breeding range or moves to the Wadden Sea. Some exchange with Russian population continues. Rapidly increasing; the Danish, Dutch and Swedish populations each contain several thousand breeding pairs, and the Belgian, Estonian, Finnish and German populations each contain several hundred breeding pairs. The species has been recorded as a
vagrant in eastern
Canada, the Northeastern
United States and
India; care must be taken to distinguish these wild birds from escaped individuals, as barnacle geese are popular waterfowl with collectors. ==Description==