Abstract

In 2020, nine major UK shooting and rural organisations proposed a voluntary transition from the use for hunting of lead shotgun ammunition to non-lead alternatives. The major food retailer Waitrose & Partners has announced its intention to move to not supplying game meat products from animals killed using any kind of lead ammunition and the National Game Dealers Association announced a plan for a similar policy to be implemented in 2022. The SHOT-SWITCH research project, which is intended to monitor the progress of these voluntary initiatives, began in the 2020/2021 shooting season. The project monitors changes in the proportions of wild-shot common pheasants Phasianus colchicus available to consumers in Great Britain that had been killed using lead and non-lead shotgun ammunition, as assessed by using inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry to identify the composition of shotgun pellets recovered from carcasses. In 2020/2021, 99.4% of the pheasants sampled had been killed using lead ammunition. We report here further results from this study for the 2021/2022 season. We found that 99.5% of the 215 pheasants from which shotgun pellets were recovered had been killed using lead ammunition. We conclude that the shooting and rural organisations’ joint statement and two years of their considerable efforts in education, awareness-raising and promotion, have not yet had a detectable effect on the ammunition types used by hunters who supply pheasants to the British game meat market.

Highlights

  • There is no existing UK-wide legal regulation to require the use of non-lead shotgun ammunition for all game hunting (Mateo and Kanstrup 2019), despite the documentation of significant negative effects of poisoning by spent lead ammunition from hunting for both wildlife (Pain et al 2019) and public health (Green & Pain 2019)

  • In February 2020, nine major shooting and rural organisations issued a joint statement expressing their collective wish to see an end, within five years, to both lead shotgun pellets and single-use plastic wads in shotgun ammunition used by those taking all live quarry (BASC 2020b)

  • This proportion is consistent with results from the study carried out in the 2020/2021 shooting season (99.4%; Green et al 2021) and for pheasants shot in the 2008/2009 season (100%; Pain et al 2010), 12 years before the shooting and rural organisations issued their joint statement in 2020

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Summary

SUMMARY

In 2020, nine major UK shooting and rural organisations proposed a voluntary transition from the use for hunting of lead shotgun ammunition to non-lead alternatives. The SHOT-SWITCH research project, which is intended to monitor the progress of these voluntary initiatives, began in the 2020/2021 shooting season. The project monitors changes in the proportions of wild-shot common pheasants Phasianus colchicus available to consumers in Great Britain that had been killed using lead and non-lead shotgun ammunition, as assessed by using inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry to identify the composition of shotgun pellets recovered from carcasses. We conclude that the shooting and rural organisations’ joint statement and two years of their considerable efforts in education, awareness-raising and promotion, have not yet had a detectable effect on the ammunition types used by hunters who supply pheasants to the British game meat market

Findings
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