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Two condors shot recently on Central Coast
Just received this press release from the Center for Biological Diversity:
5 comments from 5 users
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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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