Get the lead out!

 

Last updated 1/11/2022 at Noon

Pauline Baker, medical technician, and an assistant from Think Wild inject medicine into a golden eagle suffering from ingested lead poisoning.Think wild

It’s taken over 100 years to really understand what a horrifying impact lead used in sport hunting has on wildlife, as well as the world around us.

A lead-filled duck gizzard from a mallard I found in the mid 1960s on Sauvie Island is just one example of how lead gets into the life of waterfowl. If you go out to the same pond today and scrape the bottom, you can still find lead from those long-ago days.

If you’re a sportsman who shoots deer and elk for your supper you really should x-ray the liver, steaks, and backstrap of the animal you shot before you cook and consume it. Thanks to today’s technology, it’s now well known that when a lead projectile strikes bone and marrow, it’s blasted apart and ends up in deer and elk in places you never dreamed of finding it.

Some big-game hunters let loose with two to four rounds bringing down their quarry, and even if one round does the job, and the others end up somewhere else in the animal (if the hunter’s a good shot), the quarry’s going down with lead fragments all though it.


Most sportsmen “clean” their quarry on site, even to skinning the animal. A pile of guts left out there on the ground becomes food for wild things that get fed by eating carrion, among them eagles.

That eagle — bald or golden — then becomes the unlucky victim of the lead shot that is still there in fragments. It’s not just the eagles who suffer, but also the alert cleanup crew who first discovered the gut pile — crows, jays, magpies, and/or turkey vultures, and small mammals.

That’s the reason lead is now banned from big-game ammunition used in California. The state and feds made sport-shooting history when they passed the no-lead law in 1991. A joint statement from several leading researchers in lead toxicity got the ball rolling, and thankfully it all led to a new law.


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It only takes a few ounces of lead shot to go into an eagle’s digestive system and be carried by the blood into the liver or kidneys. Then all hell breaks loose, causing toxic damage along the way.

The first thing that goes haywire is the circulatory system of the raptor’s blood, which quickly spreads to the animal’s muscles and digestive juices. Paralysis begins to set in and the bird can no longer fly. Then it can no longer walk. Then it lays down and can no longer hold its head up or control the muscles in its legs.


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The eagle’s head droops to the ground, blood starts to seep from eyes and nostrils, and its feet curl up into a tight ball. Then it just lays there until it dies — or some Good Samaritan comes upon the poor beast, thinks it’s strange when it doesn’t fly away, gathers it up and takes it to a local vet. Or a loose dog gets there first and you know what happens…

At least three times a year I’d find one of those poor victims and I’d take it to a local veterinarian in the Bend area. One of my favorites was Broken Top Veterinarian Clinic located between Sisters and Bend on Highway 20.

Dr. Little Liedblad was operating the business back in the 1990s and into the 2000s, and the look on her face when I walked into her lab still brings tears to my eyes.


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She’d ask me to place the dying bird on her lab table where she’d slowly walk around it. She’d then use one of her medical tools to gently poke the neck, wings, tail, legs, and feet. Then she’d look deep into the bird’s eyes and mouth. After that she’d measure out the amount of chelation to be injected in it, and the long process of getting the lead out would begin.

A 10-year old golden eagle recently brought to Think Wild Hospital and Conservation Center in Bend was just about dead from lead poisoning, but the fast action of the medical crew with chelation therapy started the bird along the route to quickly save its life.

After two weeks of treatment, Think Wild medical technicians tested the blood of the eagle frequently and found it approaching releasable condition. This was a heavy, hands-on routine, with lab technicians feeding the eagle lean, wild meat to help restore its strength and vitality.


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The irrefutable knowledge we have now accumulated regarding deaths caused in non-target wildlife consuming lead-saturated carcasses leaves no question that now is the time for the Unites States of America to ban all lead in all recreation and wildlife management activities.

Finding non-lead ammunition is not a big problem. All the key manufacturing facilities now make and sell non-lead ammunition. So, please, all you active sportsmen who harvest big game, trade in your old lead ammunition for non-lead and have a thought about the fate of the entire ecosystem where you hunt.

Jim Anderson

“Get the lead out!”poster

Get the lead out!

 

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