Abstract

Lead is a neurotoxin that has been documented to affect many forms of wildlife, and has been identified as a limiting factor in a population of California Condors in Northern Arizona. The Arizona Game and Fish Department provides vouchers for free nonlead ammunition to hunters selected to hunt within the distribution of California Condors, with the intention of having fewer lead-laden offal piles available to California Condors. Although wildlife agencies may reasonably assume voucher programs motivate hunters into choosing nonlead ammunition, the lead reduction efforts attributable to the voucher program has not been empirically quantified. Our intention was to compare a control group of hunters to a treatment group of hunters within California Condor occupied areas. Both groups received educational materials regarding the deleterious effects of lead, but the treatment group also received a voucher for a free initial box of ammunition. About half of the control group used nonlead ammunition, compared to about three-fourths of the treatment group. Prominent barriers to adoption of nonlead ammunition included a general difficulty of obtaining it, obtaining it in the desired caliber, and its costliness. Frequently mentioned motivations for using nonlead was the exhortation to use it by the Department, and the desire to aid California Condor recovery by hunters. The disparate compliance rates found herein confirm and quantify the success of nonlead ammunition voucher programs, but underscore the importance of working to increase the supply of nonlead ammunition with the end of facilitating its procurement and reducing its cost.

Highlights

  • Lead is a naturally occurring element that is a neurotoxin to animals

  • These research findings attest to the success of nonlead voucher programs in reducing lead from spent ammunition available to California Condors

  • Hunters who received free nonlead ammunition were much more likely to use nonlead than those hunters who did not receive their first box of ammunition for free (77% and 49% respectively)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lead is a naturally occurring element that is a neurotoxin to animals. Lead poisoning has been documented in mammals [1], much of the literature regarding ingested lead and wildlife focuses on avian species [2]. Waterfowl are susceptible to lead poisoning [3, 4], passerines [5] and game birds [6, 7, 8] have been documented to have lead toxicosis in individual animals. Scavenger birds such as Ravens [9] and Turkey.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call