Birds of prey populations across Europe suppressed by lead poisoning
from gun ammunition
Date:
March 16, 2022
Source:
University of Cambridge
Summary:
Poisoning caused by preying on or scavenging animals shot by hunters
using lead ammunition has left the populations of many raptors -
or birds of prey - far smaller than they should be, according to
the first study to calculate these impacts across Europe.
FULL STORY ========================================================================== Poisoning caused by preying on or scavenging animals shot by hunters
using lead ammunition has left the populations of many raptors -- or
birds of prey -- far smaller than they should be, according to the first
study to calculate these impacts across Europe.
==========================================================================
When birds like eagles and Red Kites scavenge carcasses or eat injured
animals with fragments of toxic lead from gun ammunition embedded
in their bodies they can become poisoned, suffering slow and painful
deaths. Smaller doses have been shown to alter behaviour and physiology.
Now, scientists from the University of Cambridge have used data on lead
levels in the livers of over 3,000 raptors found dead in more than a dozen countries to calculate the extent to which poisoning by lead ammunition
has affected Europe's raptor populations.
Researchers estimate that, for ten raptor species, poisoning from lead ammunition alone has resulted in an absence of around 55,000 adult birds
from European skies.
Worst affected are species like eagles that are naturally long-lived,
rear few young per year and breed later in life. However, even populations
of species familiar to bird-watchers across countries like the UK, such
as the Common Buzzard and Red Kite, would be significantly bigger were
it not for lead ammunition.
For example, the study suggests that Europe's White-tailed Eagle
population is 14% smaller than it would have been without more than a
century of exposure to lethal levels of lead in some of its food.
==========================================================================
This is closely followed by the Golden Eagle and Griffon Vulture
with populations 13% and 12% smaller than they would otherwise have
been. Northern Goshawk numbers are 6% smaller, and both Red Kite and
Western Marsh Harrier populations are 3% smaller.
Common Buzzard populations are 1.5% smaller, but this equates to almost
22,000 fewer adults of this widespread species, say the researchers.
They estimate that the overall European population of ten raptor species
is at least 6% smaller than it should be, solely as a result of poisoning
from lead ammunition.
Cambridge researchers worked with the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and
Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW) and the findings are published today in
the journal Science of the Total Environment.
The scientists say that a range of alternatives to lead shotgun cartridges
and rifle bullets are widely available to hunters and work well. However, efforts by UK hunters' organisations to instigate voluntary bans on lead
shot in hunting have had almost no effect.
========================================================================== Research by the same Cambridge authors published just last month shows
over 99% of pheasants killed in the UK are still shot with lead, despite hunting groups urging members to switch to non-toxic gunshot in 2020,
with the aim of phasing out lead use by 2025.
"The continued blanket use of lead ammunition means that hunting as a
pastime simply cannot be considered sustainable unless things change,"
said lead author Prof Rhys Green, a conservation scientist at the
University of Cambridge and RSPB.
"Unfortunately, efforts to encourage voluntary shifts away from lead
shot have been completely ineffective so far," he said.
"The kinds of reductions in raptor populations suggested by our study
would be considered worthy of strong action, including legislation,
if caused by habitat destruction or deliberate poisoning." Currently,
only two European nations -- Denmark and the Netherlands -- have
banned lead shot. Denmark plans to follow this up with a ban on lead
rifle bullets. Both the European Union and the UK are considering legal
bans on all lead ammunition due to effects on wildlife and the health
of human consumers of game meat, but many hunting groups oppose this,
according to researchers.
Some raptors are poisoned when they scavenge from dead animals killed
with lead ammunition. This can be a whole carcass lost or abandoned by
hunters, or -- for example -- the guts of a hunted deer, discarded to
reduce carrying weight.
As well as vultures, which rely on scavenging, many other raptors also
scavenge when the opportunity arises, including eagles, buzzards and
kites. Many dead pheasants at UK roadsides carry lead shot and fragments
in their bodies and are scavenged by buzzards and kites.
Other species, such as falcons and goshawks, are exposed through preying
upon live animals with lead embedded in their bodies from being shot and injured but not killed. X-ray studies of wild ducks in the UK have shown
that about a quarter of live birds have shot in their bodies. Injured
ducks or pigeons are less likely to be able to evade predatory birds.
"It's taken decades for researchers from across Europe to amass sufficient
data to enable us to calculate the impacts of lead poisoning on raptor populations," said study co-author Prof Debbie Pain from the University
of Cambridge.
"We can now see just how substantial population impacts can be for some of
our most charismatic and vulnerable species -- species that are protected
by EU Regulation and the UK Wildlife & Countryside Act." "The avoidable suffering and death of numerous individual raptors from lead poisoning
should be sufficient to require the use of non-toxic alternatives.
These population-level impacts make this both doubly important and
urgent." For the latest study, researchers used population modelling
to calculate how big Europe's raptor populations would have been were it
not for the destructive impact of a single "additional mortality factor":
lead poisoning from ammunition.
They took data gathered since the 1970s from the livers of thousands
of dead raptors in 13 nations and tracked the relationship with "hunter density": average numbers of hunters per square kilometre in each country, using data from the European Federation for Hunting and Conservation.
Unsurprisingly perhaps, places with a higher density of hunters had more poisoned raptors. Scientists used this relationship to predict rates of poisoning in countries without data from bird livers, but where "hunter density" is known. Their results indicate that a country with no hunters
using lead ammunition would have virtually no lead-poisoned raptors.
Scientists say their estimates are conservative, not least as data on
poisoned raptors is limited and hugely difficult to gather. For many
European raptor species, including some of the rarest ones, there were insufficient data to estimate how great the risk is.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Cambridge. Original
written by Fred Lewsey.
Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. R.E. Green, D.J. Pain, O. Krone. The impact of lead poisoning from
ammunition sources on raptor populations in Europe. Science of The
Total Environment, 2022; 154017 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154017 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220316091725.htm
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