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Quote from: huntnphool on December 14, 2023, 02:35:48 PM What a crock of BS, and shame on those of you falling for it! Bullets either pass all the way through, or are generally found by the hunters against the hide. “If” there are any “fragments” left, I seriously the doubt the birds are chewing them up and swallowing them. That’s what I thought as well. About 80% of the time I find my bullet somewhere under the skin or it blew out the other side. I remember reading an article about 15 years-ish ago about lead being a health concern for hunters and it contaminating big game meat.
What a crock of BS, and shame on those of you falling for it! Bullets either pass all the way through, or are generally found by the hunters against the hide. “If” there are any “fragments” left, I seriously the doubt the birds are chewing them up and swallowing them.
For the case of the California condor, the deaths and lead levels in birds didn't really change pre/post ban from what I remember. Hunters had a 95% or better compliance rate. Should have been a corresponding decline in sick birds. The claim then, was that the birds were getting the lead from gut piles in Nevada where there wasn't a ban. I've also read where all the birds have been taking "dust baths" in dried ponds. The dust cleans off parasites and then the birds preen their feathers and ingest the dust. The condor zone has tons of old ponds at mine sites/tailing pools. These sites have high levels of lead, zinc, cadmium, and mercury(for the gold mines). The birds found dead of lead poisoning had elevated levels of those other heavy metals too. I don't think those other metals are being left in gut piles from hunters. I'm not saying lead is good for them or any creature. I'm just wondering how much of all this is really from old mining operations and the companies don't want to pay for remediation so hunters are the scapegoats.
Can’t speak on the condors but I can say there are no shortage of eagles around matter of fact it seems like they are absolutely everywhere
I have my doubts about deer and elk gut piles or other cervids. How many people aim for the guts. And if they accidently hit them in the guts, gut shots are usually pass throughs. I would think most lead from carcasses would be predators where whole carcasses get left in the woods. Or lead shot from small game or upland birds.
More likely to get the lead from the salmon they eat than a gut pile.
Quote from: Skyvalhunter on December 15, 2023, 05:39:58 AMMore likely to get the lead from the salmon they eat than a gut pile.Really? Bald eagles in Wyoming and Montana are getting lead poisoning from salmon? Please explain.
Quote from: Platensek-po on December 15, 2023, 06:24:33 AMQuote from: Skyvalhunter on December 15, 2023, 05:39:58 AMMore likely to get the lead from the salmon they eat than a gut pile.Really? Bald eagles in Wyoming and Montana are getting lead poisoning from salmon? Please explain. Post up the study with results that show Wyoming and Montana eagles are being poisoned by lead!