New
study shows link between bald eagle deaths and lead ammunition
From: Alicia Graef, Care2, More from this Affiliate
Endangered California condors have been the poster birds for calls to get lead ammunition out of our environment, but they might have to make some room for our nation's most iconic raptors thanks to a new study showing how lead ammunition is also harming bald eagles.
It might be illegal to
hunt bald eagles, but a study conducted by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
investigating the link between lead ammunition and bald eagle deaths in the
Upper Mississippi River U.S. Fish and Wildlife Refuge, which spans across Illinois,
Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, shows they’re dying as a result of hunters and
has led to more calls to protect wildlife from this toxic shot.
They concluded that
eagles were feeding on gut piles from deer and other animals left behind by
hunters after examining the remains from 25 animals and found that they had
from as little as one fragment to as many as 107 fragments per pile. It only
takes a little to be toxic to an eagle, and one that is suffering the effects
of poisoning is a heartbreaking sight.
Ed Britton, the manager
of the refuge's Savanna, Ill. district, told the Quad-City Times that they're
concerned with the potential long-term impacts on the thousands of bald eagles
who winter and nest on the refuge and that other wild animals are also being
exposed. He added that he hopes when hunters see the data they'll make the
switch to non-lead ammo on their own.
Continue reading at ENN
affiliate, Care2.