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TheDirt - > The Dirt -> Two condors shot recently on Central Coast
Two condors shot recently on Central Coast

Just received this press release from the Center for Biological Diversity:


$30,000 Reward Posted for Capture of Shooter
 
SAN FRANCISCO— The Center for Biological Diversity has established a $30,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons who recently shot two California condors. Although both condors remain alive, it is uncertain whether either will ever be able to return to the wild.
 
“These are senseless crimes, and we are hopeful that the establishment of this reward will help investigators find the person or people responsible,” said Adam Keats, director of the Center’s Urban Wildlands Program.  “Shooting these birds hurts us all — from the folks who have worked so hard to bring the condor back from the brink of extinction to everybody who has ever seen one of these giant birds soaring in the California sky.”
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The Wendy P. McCaw Foundation of Santa Barbara has pledged $25,000 of the total reward, which was posted after the California Department of Fish and Game announced that biologists found a juvenile female condor, “#375,” suffering from lead poisoning and with three shotgun pellets lodged in her wing and thigh. This discovery came just three weeks after biologists found condor “#286” with 15 shotgun pellets lodged in its body. Both condors were part of the flock located near Big Sur and the central coast of California.

“These are the actions of a depraved individual who should be brought to justice,” said Adam Keats. “The California condor is a powerful symbol of the wild — one our children and grandchildren deserve to experience as more than a footnote to history.”

The California condor is listed as an endangered species and is protected by both federal and state law. Condors were in decline most of the 20th century, dipping as low as 25 birds in the mid-1980s. Since then, a valiant captive-breeding effort has seen condors released in Pinnacles, Big Sur, and southern California near the Tehachapi Mountains. More than 85 condors now fly free in California skies.  Condors have also been released in Arizona and Baja California in Mexico.
 
Condors proved particularly susceptible to lead poisoning, which they get from the ingestion of lead fragments from hunter-shot lead ammunition. In response to this, California mandated the use of non-lead ammunition in all condor range in 2008.

Anyone with information regarding the shooting should call the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service at 916-414-6660 or the California Department of Fish and Game's CalTIP Program at 1-888-dfg-caltip.
 
More information on the California condor is available at: www.savethecondors.org <http://www.savethecondors.o... .

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posted by TheDirt on Monday, April 6, 2009 at 10:44 AM
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posted by KCnative on Apr 6, 2009 at 01:29 PM

" Condors proved particularly susceptible to lead poisoning, which they get from the ingestion of lead fragments from hunter-shot lead ammunition.."

There has been no scientific research to back up this claim. Just LW lib tree hugger BS.  Accepted by Calif. F&G without any reliable research.

posted by zapped on Apr 6, 2009 at 03:55 PM

I once had a biology class over on the Central coast. The professor asked a Rhetorical Question "Should humans make the concerted effort to protect  and preserve endagered birds of prey/condors/ etc etc"

Upon which I answered..."I dunno, do they taste good?"

 

I was a real hit in that community

posted by TheDirt on Apr 6, 2009 at 04:11 PM

KCnative,

Lead poisoning in condors has been pretty well documented.

See this USA Today, which says: 

"... a July study that analyzed blood of condors in the wild and compared it with blood of captive birds proves that lead from bullets is poisoning and killing condors.

The study in the journal Environmental Science & Technology was the first to identify a lead isotope in bullets bought at retail outlets in condor country and then match it to lead found in condor blood. Twenty of 26 condors sampled had high lead levels, and many exceeded levels toxic to humans."

Here's more from UC Santa Cruz, the university where the research was done.

And here's a 2007 story from the LA Daily News that talks about how 9 of 17 condors brought to the LA Zoo that year for treatment were suffering from high levels of lead.

posted by ProgressivePete2 on Apr 6, 2009 at 04:24 PM

May I suggest KCnative ingest a few handfulls of  lead and see what happens?

If it is such "LW Lib Tree hugger BS" like you say, where is your documentation of some other cause of high lead levels in condors? Where else could it possibly be coming from? Aliens perhaps?

posted by siouxcityranch on Apr 6, 2009 at 06:40 PM

what about all the lead poisoning the doves suffer during the first few weeks in September?? Poor little defenseless critters..

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