(Posted by gordon andersson <[email protected]> via moumn.org)

Birders of MN

 

Dr Lanyon is the former Director of the Bell Museum, and current head of Dept 
of EEB 
and prof at UM.  He is also the president of the American Ornithologists Union. 
 Deborah 
Reynolds, Chair of Bd of Audubon MN is also an author.  This was in the 
StarTribune on 
Dec 11.

 

------------------------------------------

 

It's time for the DNR to ban toxic lead shot

 

Birds face a wide range of threats, but lead poisoning doesn't have to be one 
of them. 
Let's join our Dakota neighbors in common-sense safeguards. 

 

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has a tough choice to make 
(and 
this time it is not about PolyMet). Now that the public comment period has 
ended, the 
agency will have to choose whether to continue to allow the use of toxic lead 
shot in most 
wildlife management areas (WMAs), or join our neighbors in North Dakota and 
South 
Dakota by setting up common-sense safeguards that benefit wildlife and people 
alike.

 

This change is necessary and overdue, because it has been proven that lead shot 
poisons 
birds and wildlife. It takes only one or two ingested lead pellets to kill a 
bird, and if you 
have ever seen a bird dying unnecessarily of lead poisoning, it is 
heartbreaking.

Waterfowl such as mallards swallow small rocks, or grit, to help with their 
digestion, but 
they easily confuse spent shot for grit. Also, bald eagles, golden eagles, 
other birds of 
prey and scavengers can accidentally ingest lead shot when consuming injured or 
dead 
game.

 

Since 1991, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has required waterfowl hunters 
to use 
nontoxic shot. Also, lead shot is not allowed on federal Waterfowl Production 
Areas 
(WPAs), which are often adjacent to WMAs. The nontoxic-shot requirement has 
saved 
millions of birds and should be extended to Minnesota’s WMAs, because birds 
don’t 
recognize boundary lines. Lead shot poisons and kills birds no matter where 
they pick it 
up.

Our birds face a wide range of threats, but lead poisoning does not need to be 
one of 
them. It is a relatively easy fix in comparison to other issues. We can protect 
iconic 
Minnesota birds such as the common loon and the trumpeter swan, as well as more 
than 
100 other bird species, from ingesting toxic lead shot simply by establishing 
nontoxic shot 
zones.

 

The myth that this rule change will drive hunters to other states is completely 
unsubstantiated. In 2006, a Nontoxic Shot Advisory Committee was formed in 
Minnesota 
and included representatives from Pheasants Forever, the Ruffed Grouse Society, 
Gander 
Mountain, the Minnesota Conservation Federation and Audubon Minnesota. The 
committee 
learned that South Dakota, a popular destination for pheasant hunting, has had 
nontoxic-
shot requirements on nearly all public lands for more than 25 years and this 
requirement 
has not reduced that state’s hunting revenue. As a matter of fact, the Dakotas 
continue to 
be a national destination for hunters.

 

We need to safeguard our public lands and bring forward measures that protect 
our birds 
from lead poisoning. We have removed lead from our consumer goods and our 
communities, and it only makes sense to remove it from our WMAs. Suitable 
alternatives 
to toxic lead shot already are being used by many hunters.

Minnesota has always been considered a leader when it comes to conservation. 
Let’s not 
get left behind any longer on lead shot.

 

Deborah Reynolds is board chair of Audubon Minnesota. Scott Lanyon is a board 
member 
of Audubon Minnesota; a professor and head of the University of Minnesota’s 
Department 
of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, and president of the American 
Ornithologists’ Union.

----------------------

 

Meanwhile, 18 Chambers of Commerce have written a letter to Gov Dayton, DNR 
Comm 
Landwehr, and seven members of the MN House and Senate asking that lead shot 
not be 
banned on public lands.  They state that MN hunters might go to neighboring 
states to 
hunt instead due to increased cost. 

 

GAndersson

St Paul

 

"Never a day passes but that I do myself the honor to commune with some of 
nature's 
varied forms." --- George Washington Carver
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