Voluntary Program Successfully Reduces Lead Poisoning In Birds

Wikimedia Commons

Hunters who use lead bullets may be contributing to the lead poisoning of eagles and ravens. But a voluntary non-lead ammunition program on the National Elk Refuge in Jackson is helping to curb the problem.             

Back in 2010, the non-profit Craighead Beringia South gave away copper bullets to prove to hunters that the quality was as good or better than lead. Research biologist Ross Crandall says, hunters are natural conservationists and don’t want to contribute to the illness or death of scavengers feeding on their gut piles anyway.

“It’s not like we had to sell the bullets,” he says. “A lot of people that came in to get ammunition already knew about the performance of these bullets. And so, for the most part, you know, 99% of the people we interacted with were completely for it.”

Crandall says their research encouraged the National Elk Refuge to adopt the voluntary program.

“The refuge has been great by advocating a voluntary switch,” he says. “And this year, I think they had somewhere around 70% of the successful elk hunters use non-lead ammunition, which we just think is fantastic.”

Crandall says, lead poisoning in birds is a problem nationwide. In the future, he says, his organization hopes to offer such educational programs as the copper-bullet give aways in other areas of the state and country, too. 

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Flipboard
Melodie Edwards is the host and producer of WPM's award-winning podcast The Modern West. Her Ghost Town(ing) series looks at rural despair and resilience through the lens of her hometown of Walden, Colorado. She has been a radio reporter at WPM since 2013, covering topics from wildlife to Native American issues to agriculture.
Related Content
  1. Idaho man under the influence of alcohol was arrested after allegedly kicking a bison in the leg in Yellowstone
  2. Two Wyoming agencies debut their plan to reduce wildlife-vehicle collisions around Dubois
  3. Dogs evacuated from the West Bank come to Wyoming
  4. Records released in alleged Sublette County wolf abuse case