Finally, it looks like there’s a real chance to make the switch in Maryland to non-toxic ammo, proven to perform better than lead, barely more expensive and, most important, the means to protect ...
On March 23, the Maryland House passed HB 1067 by a 91 to 42 vote, thereby taking an important step toward protecting people and non-target wildlife from plumbism — lead poisoning from bullet ...
When a hunter shoots a deer, elk, or other animal with lead ammunition, the damage extends far beyond the target. Upon impact, the bullet splinters into tiny fragments that scatter throughout the body ...
In late fall and winter, bald eagles in Maryland shift from their warm-weather diet largely of fish to one largely of carrion. This shift coincides with deer hunting, so eagles suffer increasingly ...
Researchers from Jülich Research Centre in Erlangen, Germany, have proven that centuries-old toxic waste in the form of old lead bullets can still be useful today. The team sourced these 16th- and ...
CAMDEN COUNTY, N.C. -- Bald eagles, a federally protected species, are falling victim to lead poisoning in eastern North Carolina. Lou Browning, a representative for Hatteras Island Wildlife ...
Every year, hunters deposit tens of thousands of tons of lead, from bullet fragments, into our environment. Consequently, during the Obama administration, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced ...
On March 23, the Maryland House passed House Bill 1067 by a 91-42 vote, thereby taking an important step toward protecting people and non-target wildlife from plumbism — lead poisoning from bullet ...
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