It was early winter, the end of deer-hunting season in Central California, and condor biologist Joe Burnett of the Ventana Wildlife Society was steeling himself for a task he had come to dread. Burnett and a team of four Condor Recovery Program members were at a remote site in the mountains east of Big Sur, where they were trapping condors and testing them for lead poisoning.
Three team members were restraining an adult female known as Condor 208. Their arms encircled her body, and one person clamped the bird's powerful jaws shut. Burnett grabbed a syringe.
"OK, here we go," he said. The team members tightened their hold, and Burnett plunged the needle into the bird's leg. The condor flinched.
Burnett transferred a drop of blood to a glass slide and inserted it into a portable instrument that tests blood for lead. It takes the instrument three minutes to give a reading; Burnett calls the waiting time "180 seconds from hell." An eerie silence enveloped the group as they awaited a prognosis on the bird's fate.
The machine beeped and displayed the test result: High. The bird's blood-lead level was elevated beyond the instrument's range. Condor 208 was in mortal danger.
The team rushed Condor 208 to the Los Angeles Zoo, where more sophisticated tests showed her blood-lead level to be more than ten times higher than acceptable. Veterinarians confined Condor 208 in a small pen and started twice-daily injections of a chelating agent to flush the lead from her body. It was the beginning of a desperate, round-the-clock attempt to save her life.
Prior to the gold rush, the California condor's population had been stable for thousands of years. The birds, with nine-and-a-half-foot wingspans, soared over much of the West. But beginning in the mid-1800s, a massive influx of new settlers upended the region's ecology and the condor began to plunge toward extinction. Shooting, egg collecting and especially poisoning from lead bullet fragments in hunter-shot game depleted the species' population. By 1982, only 22 condors remained.
Alarmed that our nation's largest bird was on its way to becoming a museum relic, a team of scientists embarked on one of the most controversial and high-profile recovery programs in conservation history. They captured every condor in the wild and established a captive-breeding program. The Condor Recovery Program has since increased the condor's population to its current level of more than 300 birds. About 150 of these condors have been released to fly free in California, Arizona, Utah and Baja California.
Lead poisoning was the main reason for the condor's decline, and lead remains the primary obstacle to the bird's recovery. Hunting season is a particularly perilous time; the number of lead-poisoning incidents spikes when condors eat game that has been shot but not retrieved by hunters.
Lead bullet fragments were first shown to be killing condors in 1984. As the years passed and evidence accumulated documenting the harm caused by spent ammunition, condor biologists determined that if they could not solve the lead bullet issue, the bird's future was hopeless.
Advocates for banning lead bullets point out that alternatives such as solid copper bullets are considered some of the best ammunition available. A simple switch to other ammunition would stop the dispersal of thousands of tons of lead across our landscape each year. At the same time, it would preserve the sport of hunting, which provides a significant food source for condors.


Comments
Amazing! To paraphrase Donne: no creature is an island unto themselves.
Posted by Shir-El, Eilat, Israel on September 13,2008 | 04:28AM
This was an EXCELLENT article!! Thank you.
Posted by Liz McCleaster on September 18,2008 | 12:11PM
The article "Condors in a coal mine" was must interesting and informative. Thanks. Rich
Posted by Rich Matson on September 18,2008 | 01:44PM
Awesome story!!! I drove past two adult condors on Hyw 1 in 1974. They are amazing and I am so glad that the work to save them is being successful!!!
Posted by Donna Rafuse on September 18,2008 | 02:37PM
I really enjoyed reading your article. It is very informative and an eye opener. In July, we went on a trip to Parker, Arizona. On our way back to Fresno, California, on Highway 95, our vehicle, a van, was struck by a very large bird and broke the windshield. It looked like what I believe was a Condor that at first looked disoriented just before it decided to take off for flight in our direction. I remember the wing span and from reading your article, I know truly believe it may have been a Condor. What I am wondering is, if this bird had lead poison, would it make a bird confused or disoriented as if it were off course? Especially if this Condor had not been tested and treated right away?
Posted by Victoria Rangel on September 18,2008 | 03:55PM
I work near the Vermillion Cliffs wilderness area and have had numerous occasions to view these magnificent birds both soaring over 2,000 feet above the cliffs and also perched on rocks near the Colorado River. The lead poisoning that sickens these birds is a concern for hunters and non-hunters alike as cited by the study of ground venison donated to food pantries. I hope that the condor restoration project can continue so that future generations will be able to see these fantastic birds soaring free.
Posted by Kelli Wiggins on September 18,2008 | 04:38PM
It is scary to think of all the venison I ate when I was a child and into my teens. Does this also apply to wild turkeys shot in the central part of the US, namely Kansas and Missouri?
Posted by Elizabeth Engle on September 18,2008 | 05:46PM
I am ever so grateful to those with a broader view. You have a commitment to ALL life and because of your intelligence and concerns you persue these issues. Thank you all! I know far too many personally who could not care less about condors, owls, and all other living creatures, as long as THEIR lives go on. Thank you to those of you who understand the critical connection to all living things. Without you, our planet and lives would be even more close to peril than it already is. Please know how appreciated you are.
Posted by pj on September 18,2008 | 06:24PM
Bullets are not the only source of lead. They use lead weights to balance tires on cars and other vehicles. These fly off and land in the road or road side. Those that land in the road get ground into very small pieces that get into the environment and food chain. My wife and I walk a three mile route around a big block and we pick up any trash we find along the way. I have been very surprised at the number of these lead weights we find on almost every walk. Has anyone ever done a study of the lead balancing weights that are flying off as people drive?
Posted by Dave Gardener on September 18,2008 | 07:17PM
Wonderful article. Now if the rest of the country would follow California's lead........
Posted by Cherry on September 18,2008 | 10:15PM
It is so hard to understand progress, but at the same time is amazing to see all the efforts to recover endanger species. The only condor I have seen was in a Museum.
Posted by J. Silva on September 19,2008 | 06:31AM
The destruction of wild life habitat is utterly rampant. Just so more developers can make more money and the rich & near rich can have more luxurious homes. Instead lets bring back the interior of cities large & small by renewal. Block by block. Even the rain forests are being leveled and mankind will be sorry after it is too late.
Posted by LaDonna English on September 19,2008 | 09:20AM
I've seen the Condor's at the Grand Canyon and it is always a highlight of the visit.The support for these amazing birds is substantial and hopefully their recovery will continue.
Posted by Sue Schmidt on September 19,2008 | 04:34PM
I am E-mailing this article to my daughter whose husband gathers Antelope for meatr to eat. I do not know if he is aware of the lead bullets affect, but he is well read and I hope that he knows about lead bullets
Posted by MARION ROUSSEAU on September 19,2008 | 05:41PM
Wow!I feel so bad for the Condors. But it's good that they increased the population!
Posted by denise on September 20,2008 | 10:54AM
This article makes me think of all the lead weights my family and I lost while fishing when I was growing up. Sometimes the line snagged and was broken and left in the river/stream while trying to free it, and sometimes we dropped the lead weights while putting them on the line but didn't retrieve them. Also we handled the lead weights with our bare hands. I'm sure we weren't the only ones. A We all need to be educated on this danger, and all take steps to elimenate lead in our environment.
Posted by S. Neal on September 22,2008 | 02:02PM
I am dumbfounded that all states have not banned lead shot! I think it is inexcusable.
Posted by Jerry Haig on September 22,2008 | 08:46PM
I have seen this wonderful creature flying over my head, every one around was astonished. If people could experience the same they would appreciate it's wonder and contribution to our world. It's a shame we cannot appreciate both the creature nor the efforts of the park service to keep it alive an thriving.
Posted by on September 24,2008 | 05:03AM
We owe these caring men our most heart felt gratitude. These will not only save the condor but the many humans that consume the meat from a hunt. If the rest of the hunters heed the warning and switch to non-lead ammo, they will undoubtedly save their innocent children from health problems caused by lead.
Posted by Leo Nebel on September 25,2008 | 06:56PM
Unfortunately the fact is that a lot of people won't care. They'll just say if you don't want to risk the danger, don't eat the meat. Others won't care about the birds and other animals. Still many others simply won't believe that such a small ammount of lead could be dangerous. They'll just ignore it and keep shooting with lead bullets. The stupid thing is, the people who pass these bills know this from experience with other such bills. What needs to be done is to just completely ban the production of lead bullets altogether. But then, that would be expecting to much intelligence and consideration from the masses. Honestly, humanity in general is a sad and sorry race. Some people aren't, but the majority don't give one bit about anything that doesn't directly, (and immediately) affect themselves, or those they care about.
Posted by James on January 9,2009 | 04:00PM