Las Vegas Review-Journal

Condor 5roup wants hunters not to use lead

- By Felicia Fonseca The Associated Press

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — An effort to bring one of the world’s largest birds back from the brink of extinction is expanding after northern Arizona and southern Utah found some success in getting deer hunters to use ammunition not made of lead.

A group working to protect the endangered California condor is setting its sights on small-game and varmint hunters as lead continues to threaten the birds that feed on animal carcasses. The group has enlisted the help of a social scientist to target its messaging to a broader set of hunters that are not always after big game.

“We have hope for success, it all comes down to this change in hunter tradition — and to change your traditions takes a long time,” said Chris Parish of the Peregrine Fund, which tracks the condors in the Southwest U.S. “It’s not an overnight change.”

The condors nearly went extinct in the 20th century because of lead poisoning, hunting and habitat destructio­n. The last of them were rounded up and bred in captivity to recover the species. The Southwest population started with six birds released from Vermilion Cliffs in 1996, and it now stands at 82.

The rest of the roughly 450 condors are held in captivity or flying free in California and Baja, Mexico. The birds with wingspans of up to 10 feet also take short trips into Southern Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico and near the Utah-wyoming line.

The recovery group previously said it would consider ending the program to reintroduc­e condors to the wild if it didn’t see declines in extreme lead exposures and lead-related deaths by the end of 2016.

But exposures have remained the same, with a spike in 2012, according to a five-year review of the program released this month. Lead-related deaths didn’t improve either.

Lead poisoning accounts for the majority of condor deaths, with predation being the second-leading cause.

Despite that, the group said it hasn’t exhausted its efforts and wants to forge ahead with new education efforts.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez ?? The Associated Press A California condor takes flight June 21 in the Ventana Wilderness east of Big Sur, Calif.
Marcio Jose Sanchez The Associated Press A California condor takes flight June 21 in the Ventana Wilderness east of Big Sur, Calif.

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