This species is native to
North America, breeding in
Northern Canada and
Alaska in a variety of
tundra habitats, where the
nest is usually located in an elevated area near water. The eggs are laid in a shallow depression, lined with plant materials and down. However, as the nests are made close-to, or directly on, the ground, the eggs (along with lone nesting females and newly-hatched goslings) are particularly vulnerable to predation by certain mammalian
carnivores. Depending on the region, potential threats may vary from free-ranging
domestic or
feral cats and
dogs, to
foxes,
coyotes,
rats and other animals, such as some species of
snakes. Thus, as a result, both geese—especially the male—in a nesting pair become highly aggressive and defensive of the nesting site, even chasing people away who may happen to walk by. A pair may mate for life (up to around 20 years). Adult geese are often seen leading their goslings in a line with one parent at the front, and the other at the back of the "parade". Like most geese, the cackling goose is naturally
migratory, with their overwintering range being most of the U.S. (locally in
Western Canada, the
West Coast of the U.S. and northern
Mexico). The calls overheard from large flocks of cackling geese, flying in their typical "V"-shaped formation, signal the transitions into spring and fall. In some areas, migration routes change due to shifts in available habitat, environment and food sources. As
vagrants, cackling geese have reached
Western Europe of their own accord, as has been proven by
ringing recoveries and documented sightings. The birds seen in Europe are of, at least, the subspecies
hutchinsii, and possibly others. Cackling geese are also found, naturally, as vagrants around the
Kamchatka Peninsula in
Far Eastern Russia (
Siberia),
East China, and throughout the islands of
Japan. Nevertheless, the IUCN considered the species to be
extirpated from Japan, where it previously had an established non breeding (winter) population. Birds have recently been reintroduced to both Japan and Siberia. ==Feeding==