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Making a Difference in the Fight Against Lead Poisoning in Iowa's Wildlife

July 16, 2018 7:18 PM

In February of 2018, wildlife biologists and veterinarians investigated the suspicious death of 32 trumpeter swans in a Clinton County wetland. What befell these icons of conservation in Iowa puzzled investigators, but in the end there was evidence to suggest that the toxic properties of lead the birds had accidentally ingested played at least an intervening role in their sudden death. Although trumpeter swan populations have been and continue to grow in Iowa, the sudden and unnatural death of those 32 swans, and other more isolated cases of lead poisoning deaths among other waterbirds, scavenging birds, and birds of prey across Iowa, has prompted interest in finding ways to reduce exposure and curtail these unnatural deaths...

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Doing your Part in the Management of Iowa's White-tailed Deer and the CWD Threat

September 15, 2018 12:26 AM

White-tailed deer are as synonymous with the ‘acreage living’ experience as fences and ragweed. We find them everywhere in Iowa, thriving in urban forests and remote sections of cropland with little more than a ditch for cover. To many of us they’re a welcome sight, a glimpse of life on a cold winter day or an opportunity to spend time afield with family and friends each fall in their pursuit. To some they’re an annoyance, pestering crops or landscape plants with their seemingly insatiable drive for fresh plant growth and woody browse. Love them or hate them, one thing is clear: despite their tumultuous experience in Iowa’s earliest years of statehood, white-tailed deer are here to stay and participation in their management and conservation is a core responsibility of all property owners. And today, new challenges like that posed by Chronic Wasting Disease are elevating those responsibilities and require wide engagement in ensuring deer continue to thrive in Iowa....

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Make this deer season lead bullet free – for the birds!

November 12, 2019 9:02 AM

This fall, over 100,000 Iowans will take refuge in the fields and forests of our state to participate in an annual ritual: deer season. This ritual however has shallow roots, dating only to the 1950s thanks to the successful restoration of white-tailed deer following their extinction in the state. The annual tradition is important for farms and farmers, car bumpers and their insurance companies, and most importantly, families who annually share time outdoors, creating memories, and harvest a healthy food source. The growth of this tradition in Iowa is a true conservation success story.

Soaring above many of these hunters this fall will be another symbol of the conservation movement’s meritorious achievements of the 20th century. The bald eagle was once entirely absent from Iowa’s rivers and fields due to the impacts of the chemical DDT. But, as the story for the white-tails goes, the eagle was restored through the passionate efforts of concerned citizens and wildlife agencies and today can be seen in every corner of the state.

Today, thanks to 21st century research in Minnesota, Arizona, and elsewhere, we’re learning about an important nexus between these two conservation success stories that’s leading scientists and both hunting and non-hunting wildlife champions to encourage a minor tweak in the traditional equipment used for hunting deer...

Continue reading the story on the Acreage Living Newsletter here.

 

 

Flattening the curve of Chronic Wasting Disease in Iowa’s white-tailed deer

November 17, 2020 3:00 PM

Everyone has learned a lot about the spread and control of infectious diseases in 2020. Although the important task at hand is to apply that knowledge in helping our neighbors and family avoid a Covid-19 infection, we would be wise to apply many of these lessons to help white-tailed deer fight a disease of their own.

Chronic Wasting Disease, or CWD, is a neurological disease affecting members of the deer family. The prion-based CWD that infects the central nervous system is a different type of disease from the virulent respiratory one we have become familiar with in 2020. But CWD and Covid-19 share many characteristics, including how they can be spread asymptomatically and the potential for high infection rates in the absence of intervention.

The fight against Covid-19 includes five now-familiar interventions; 1) wash your hands, 2) wear a mask, 3) maintain physical distance, 4) avoid large gatherings, and 5) stay home when you can. It seems unlikely a deer will soon don a mask and they have no hands to wash. So, the fight against CWD should employ three interventions.

Knowing exactly how a deer becomes infected with CWD is difficult. But, biologists know the prions that spread CWD are found in salvia and urine of infected deer. Thus, the most likely transmission route of CWD is direct deer-to-deer contact -- the deer not maintaining a safe physical distance. Because deer are highly social, convincing them to maintain physical distance is about as feasible as convincing them to wear masks. But humans can help ensure deer maintain physical distance by discouraging behaviors that lead to unnaturally close interactions. That’s why wildlife biologists espouse people to never feed deer for any reason, because packing many deer around feed or mineral is the human equivalent of packing a subway car with a bunch of maskless people in 2020.

The next tool for slowing the spread and flattening the curve is to avoid large gatherings. Just as we have seen in headline-grabbing “super spreader” events during 2020, large gatherings can have disproportionate impacts on the transmission of disease by increasing the number of interactions between infected and healthy patients. The deer equivalent of 2020’s choirs or large indoor gatherings are high density populations. Researchers know that higher deer densities facilitate greater transmission and prevalence of CWD. Thus, to manage CWD, landowners, hunters, and others with influence over deer must work to manage populations through hunting to keep densities low.

The final tool for managing disease is to stay home. As with our other interventions with CWD, we are not asking the deer to pick up sourdough baking or buy a coloring book and stick it out in their corner of the woods. Rather the deer-equivalent of staying home focuses on emphasizing the importance of humans not moving deer – dead or alive --  long distances. Imagine a CWD-positive deer being harvested in Allamakee County and brought to Webster County for processing and disposed of in a field there. CWD prions would be in that disposed-of carcass and could be encountered by a healthy deer, introducing the disease to the area for the first time. Thus, hunters should not move deer carcasses away from their place of origin, or when carcasses are moved long distances, they must be disposed of in landfills.  

There are notable differences between Covid-19 and CWD. On key difference is in the speed with which CWD spreads. Recall, last year at this time no American had ever heard the word Covid-19 and only epidemiologists knew or concerned themselves with phrases like “flatten the curve” or “slow the spread”. Today just 12 months later, those refrains are repeated everywhere from corporate boardrooms to children’s playgrounds. CWD in contrast has been known in wild members of the deer family since the 1960s and slowly spread across North America. Thus, CWD seems to be like Covid-19 playing out in slow motion. The risk it poses to wild deer will play out over years and decades, rather than the supercharged pace of our current pandemic.

Slower spread however is no excuse for delay in acting to flatten the CWD curve.  Just like Covid-19, solving CWD comes down to the collective impact of individual decisions. Everyone has an important role to play in ensuring that white-tailed deer populations remain healthy and safe. To do that, we must all help deer by changing our behaviors and ensuring deer maintain physical distance, avoid large gatherings, and stay home. If we do that, we can ensure that this wonderful resource is here for families to safely enjoy for generations to come, far beyond the trending lifespan of #FlattenTheCurve.

To learn more about CWD, visit https://naturalresources.extension.iastate.edu/wildlife/cwd

Chronic Wasting Disease Ambassadors - Jefferson

Thursday, June 9, 2022 - 6:00pm

In an effort to better educate Iowans on how to manage white-tailed deer and the spread of the challenging Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) that impacts their populations, Iowa State University Extension and Outreach is partnering with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources to offer two sessions of their educational program Chronic Wasting Disease Ambassadors. Read more about Chronic Wasting Disease Ambassadors - Jefferson

Chronic Wasting Disease Ambassadors - Corydon

Tuesday, September 13, 2022 - 6:00pm

In an effort to better educate Iowans on how to manage white-tailed deer and the spread of the challenging Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) that impacts their populations, Iowa State University Extension and Outreach is partnering with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources to offer two sessions of their educational program Chronic Wasting Disease Ambassadors. Read more about Chronic Wasting Disease Ambassadors - Corydon

Chronic Wasting Disease Ambassadors - Woodbury County

Wednesday, March 13, 2024 - 6:00pm to Tuesday, March 26, 2024 - 8:00pm

Learn about CWD management and ecology, network with wildlife managers and other community members and become an ambassador for the scientific management of CWD. The class meets three times on March 12, 19, and 26th from 6-8 PM. Attendence at each class session is expected, though one absence can be arranged. Learn more about the program on this page.

Register here. Read more about Chronic Wasting Disease Ambassadors - Woodbury County

Lead Contamination in Wildlife

The impacts of lead contamination on wildlife have been documented since the 1800's. Traditionally, the most recognized exposure pathways for wildlife was through the ingestion of spent lead shot pellets in wetlands where hunters had discharged high volumes of shot. Today, wildlife biologists understand a number of exposure pathways in which wildlife can ingest lead and become sick, and in many cases die and are working with hunters and anglers to reduce these unnatural mortalities through use of non-lead alternatives.

Finding lead in the environment

Wildlife do not encounter lead from natural sources in the wild. All exposure is from human activities. This exposure can come from many sources including paint from old buildings, mine tailings, industrial or domestic uses of lead like wheel weights, and contaminated sediment or water. However, the general consensus among wildlife biologists is that the primary sources of lead contamination in wildlife in Iowa and throughout the upper Midwest is through direct consumption of lead from spent ammunition or discarded fishing tackle.

Lead is not known to biomagnify, meaning consumption of plants or animals that have absorbed lead is not thought to be an exposure pathway affecting wildlife. Rather, lead contamination results from direct exposure to lead, almost exclusively occurring when an animal consumes it, either accidentally in association with other food items or intentionally after mistaking it for a natural substance.

Table 1. Common sources of lead consumption among wildlife.

Source Vulnerable species or groups Intervening factors

Lost fishing tackle

Waterbirds, including loons, ducks, geese, and swans

Water depth, water chemistry, vegetation, movement of sediments to bury lead.

Spent shot pellets on the ground

Ground-foraging birds, including mourning doves

Most problematic in areas of highly concentrated shooting like hunting preserves, managed hunting fields, or trap ranges.

Spent shot pellets in water

Waterbirds, namely ducks, geese, and swans

Water depth, water chemistry, vegetation, movement of sediments to bury lead.

Shot pellets in unrecovered game (crippling loss, wounding loss)

Predatory animals (hawks, owls, eagles)

Concentration of prey (e.g., historically around high waterfowl harvest areas pre-1991 ban on lead ammunition in waterfowl hunting).

Bullet fragments in:

  • Gut piles or discarded carcasses (primarily from furbearers and deer)
  • Unrecovered game (crippling loss, discarded carcasses)
  • Animals shot and disposed of for wildlife management
  • Euthanized animals (primarily livestock and wounded deer from vehicle incidents)
  • Illegally shot and discarded animals

Scavenging animals, including hawks, vultures, eagles, crows, and some mammals.

Temperatures and decomposition rates, snow cover, alternative food source availability, time of year.


Lead bullets
Lead bullets, like the .50 caliber muzzleloader bullet pictured here at left, fragment upon impact, leaving behind small pieces that can injure or kill wildlife that eat them. Non-toxic bullets, like the copper one pictured here at right, are a safe and effective alternative. Copper casing around lead bullets, as shown to the left, do not reduce the rates of lead fragmentation on impact.

Unique threats to birds

Most research on wildlife and lead contamination has been conducted on birds, which are uniquely vulnerable to lead contamination because of morphological adaptions they have for digestion. Most species, including waterfowl (ducks, geese, and swans) and upland game birds (including pheasants, quail, and doves) have muscular gizzards which create unique opportunities for contamination in two ways. First, they naturally consume hard substances (namely small rocks) for ‘grit’ which aids in digestion. Many species have been documented to consume spent shot or fishing tackle from fields or from water bodies, presumably mistaking the pellets for suitable grit. Once ingested, these species are further vulnerable to contamination from ingested lead because rather than swiftly passing ingested lead as mammals would, birds can retain hard substances in their gizzard for periods of multiple days to weeks, leading to chronic absorption of lead from a single exposure event. More carnivorous birds do not have a well-developed muscular gizzard, but some species, including bald eagles, are thought to be uniquely vulnerable to lead contamination because of the highly acidic nature of their stomach, which breaks down lead and makes them more vulnerable to exposure, despite possibly passing or egesting lead quicker than other birds. These physiological characteristics of birds, along with their foraging habits, make birds uniquely vulnerable to lead contamination.

Table 2: Midwestern birds documented to have been poisoned by lead ammunition or fishing tackle.

Species Shot Bullet fragments Tackle
Common loon     X
Double-crested cormorant     X
Black-crowned night heron     X
Great blue-heron     X
Trumpeter swan X   X
Lesser snow goose X    
Greater white-fronted goose X    
Canada goose X   X
Mallard X   X
Green-winged teal X    
Northern shoveler X    
American wigeon X    
Gadwall X    
Black duck X    
Northern pintail X    
Wood duck X    
Common goldeneye X    
Ring-necked duck X    
Canvasback X   X
Redhead X   X
Lesser scaup     X
Greater scaup X   X
Ruddy duck X    
Common merganser     X
Bald eagle X X X
Golden eagle   X  
Northern harrier X    
Sharp-shinned hawk X    
Cooper’s hawk X    
Red-tailed hawk X    
Prairie falcon X    
Peregrine falcon X    
Turkey vulture X X  
Gray partridge X    
Ring-necked pheasant X    
Northern bobwhite X    
Ruffed grouse X    
Wild turkey X    
Sandhill crane X   X
American coot X    
Virginia rail X    
Sora X    
American woodcock X    
Herring gull X    
Mourning dove X    
Great horned owl X    
Snowy owl X X  
Long-eared owl X    
Blue-headed vireo X    
American crow   X  
Brown thrasher X    
Yellow-rumped warbler X    
Dark eyed junco X    
Brown-headed cowbird X    

Note: This list may not be comprehensive and is based on published research findings. Some species are routinely found to have ingested lead whereas others may represent rare documented instances. If you are aware of omissions from this table from published literature, please contact us to make the amendment.


Learning more

Learn more about efforts to encourage hunters and anglers to voluntarily switch to non-lead ammunition and tackle through Blank Park Zoo’s collaborative LEADing The Way Campaign.

Technical resources to help hunters make the switch to non-lead ammunition can be found at HuntingWithNon-lead.org

Learn more about Lead Poisoning in Wild Birds with this article from the National Wildlife Health Center

For a more technical overview of the science of lead contamination in wildlife download the Technical Review on Sources and Implications of Lead Ammunition and Fishing Tackle on Natural Resources by The Wildlife Society.