The lead ingested by an eagle that recently died, and other scavengers, comes from ammunition used in the deer hunt.
A Utah wildlife rehab center is now asking for hunters to make a switch in ammunition from lead to copper following the death of an eagle in the Beehive State.
In the author's test, the Whitetail Country 6.5 Creedmoor load shot 5-shot groups under an inch at 100 yards. (Photo/Richard ...
Hunters and fishing enthusiasts are being asked to avoid using lead ammunition and other lead products to keep from poisoning wildlife as well as themselves and family members ...
Gun Owners of America, a two-million-member, nonprofit gun lobbying organization, has announced its latest defense against ...
Animals that scavenge on carcasses shot and contaminated with lead bullet fragments, or wading birds that ingest spent lead-shot pellets or lost fishing weights mistaking them for food or grit, can ...
The center also shared images from the USGS, which showed radiographs of a deer carcass that had been shot with a lead-based bullet. In the image, white spots, identified as lead fragments ...
It's deer hunting season for Siouxland hunters. But when ammunition ends up inside other birds and animals, there can be ...
Earning a first-career start in game 127, White already had 18 points early in the second quarter with the Bullets holding a ...
Illawarra continue to take the best shots from their opposition and assume control, with the NBL leaders doing it again in a ...