Here is a picture of lead fragmentation in 4 different animals. All the little white spots are lead fragments.
This is the link FWIW.
This is the link FWIW.
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It's a good point but certain larger species seem to be rhe most at risk. There are tons of studies out there. It's also affected large vultures in Europe Asia Africa
Ahhhh! So we should listen to an angry hunter instead of research by scientists. Makes sense……I'm sick of lead phobia. Most research is flawed because it started with an agenda. Lead passes through most animals too quickly after ingestion to have effect. Forget eating animals that have pass through wounds.
Ducks really? I need steel shot in my bay because supposedly ducks get lead poisoning eating algae and plants off the bottom where the lead shot accumulates. First of all, how densely covered is the bay bottom with lead shot that they could eat enough lead to get sick? Second a friend of mine, a third generation Bayman that has hunted ducks for over fifty years said, "I have never found a pellet in a duck that I didn't put there". Meaning it was from his fatal shot. He processes dozens of ducks every season, every year for over fifty years. His father and grandfather father did as well. How did they not die from lead poisoning. When they'd occasionally spit out lead shot while eating their ducks. They'd certainly have to have missed a few and accidentally ingested some shot. Third lead is heavy and will quickly settle into the bottom below forage levels.
As a caster of lead with young children I was concerned about the health of my kids so I looked into it. Truth is lead doesn't become airborne easily and people don't readily absorb most forms of lead either. Most lead fears are stoked by well meaning but ignorant environmentalist and companies making big money on abatements.
Just stop the stupidity
I do agree to a point. Most hunters are very concerned about the environment, contrary to what propaganda tells everyone else. The problem I have experienced is the lead replacements have been far less effective on animals, they are far more expensive, and they are far more finicky to achieve proper accuracy. Just another example of people making decisions based on emotions, or it looked good on paper. The Outside is a whole different reality that the people who make these decisions have never seen first hand.I don't see anything wrong with a member bringing up a concern........
The thing is, most of us here are what I would consider responsible hunters, and actually beleive there is an ethical way to hunt that INCLUDES recovering anything that could harm animals we don’t intend to harm.I do agree to a point. Most hunters are very concerned about the environment, contrary to what propaganda tells everyone else. The problem I have experienced is the lead replacements have been far less effective on animals, they are far more expensive, and they are far more finicky to achieve proper accuracy. Just another example of people making decisions based on emotions, or it looked good on paper. The Outside is a whole different reality that the people who make these decisions have never seen first hand.
Many people like to shoot ground squirrels and leave them lay - the lead does in fact move up the food chain. If you don’t police your kills - gather the carcasses you are affecting many animals unintentionallyThat ban was legit as sending hundreds even thousands of lead pellets into the air, ducks and habitat per hunter, per hunt was catastrophic to the ducks. So who is this ignorance that “pisses you off” comment directed at? I’ve never hunted or intended to hunt ducks, but respect all animal habitats and act accordingly. The OP was about squirrels and the Cali Condors…
Here is a picture of lead fragmentation in 4 different animals. All the little white spots are lead fragments.
This is the link FWIW.
View attachment 334468
I would suggest that you look at the actual effects of appropriately used DDT and the profound impact it being discontinued has on the mosquito born diseases in Africa as well as the subsequent studies and the false premise for it to be banned . But this entire discussion is getting way off tangent.I’m guessing you’ve never researched the effects of DDT on the eagle population, and how it caused their numbers to become endangered.
maybe you should read up before accusing people of pushing an agenda. True it wasn’t lead, but it’s the cause you’re looking for.
I have a recollection that when pure lead is in the environment, it corrodes, forming a protective barrier encapsulating it.I'm sick of lead phobia. Most research is flawed because it started with an agenda. Lead passes through most animals too quickly after ingestion to have effect. Forget eating animals that have pass through wounds.
Ducks really? I need steel shot in my bay because supposedly ducks get lead poisoning eating algae and plants off the bottom where the lead shot accumulates. First of all, how densely covered is the bay bottom with lead shot that they could eat enough lead to get sick? Second a friend of mine, a third generation Bayman that has hunted ducks for over fifty years said, "I have never found a pellet in a duck that I didn't put there". Meaning it was from his fatal shot. He processes dozens of ducks every season, every year for over fifty years. His father and grandfather father did as well. How did they not die from lead poisoning. When they'd occasionally spit out lead shot while eating their ducks. They'd certainly have to have missed a few and accidentally ingested some shot. Third lead is heavy and will quickly settle into the bottom below forage levels.
As a caster of lead with young children I was concerned about the health of my kids so I looked into it. Truth is lead doesn't become airborne easily and people don't readily absorb most forms of lead either. Most lead fears are stoked by well meaning but ignorant environmentalist and companies making big money on abatements.
Just stop the stupidity