Unleaded | WILD HOPE
Special | 13m 11sVideo has Closed Captions
Golden eagles are declining due to an unlikely poison: lead ammunition left behind by game hunters.
Golden eagles are one of the largest raptors in North America, and their numbers are declining due to an unlikely poison: lead ammunition left behind by game hunters. Eagles scavenge on animal remains contaminated by lead bullets, so conservationists are proposing a radical solution: getting hunters to go lead-free.
Major support for NATURE is provided by The Arnhold Family in memory of Henry and Clarisse Arnhold, The Fairweather Foundation, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III, Kate W. Cassidy Foundation, Kathy...
Unleaded | WILD HOPE
Special | 13m 11sVideo has Closed Captions
Golden eagles are one of the largest raptors in North America, and their numbers are declining due to an unlikely poison: lead ammunition left behind by game hunters. Eagles scavenge on animal remains contaminated by lead bullets, so conservationists are proposing a radical solution: getting hunters to go lead-free.
How to Watch Nature
Nature is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Buy Now
Explore More Ways to Watch
Bring the beauty and wonders of wildlife and natural history into your home with classic NATURE episodes.Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipMore from This Collection
Pangolin Protectors | WILD HOPE
Video has Closed Captions
Due to the demand for their scales, pangolins are the most trafficked animal in the world. (12m 24s)
Way of the Elephants | WILD HOPE
Video has Closed Captions
Elephant migration corridors in India are a necessary thoroughfare for one of the largest animals. (15m 11s)
Whale Shark Homecoming | WILD HOPE
Video has Closed Captions
A renowned spiritual leader is inspiring fishermen to become guardians of the world’s biggest fish. (16m 49s)
Video has Closed Captions
The artificial intelligence keeping tigers at bay. (14m 31s)
Video has Closed Captions
In northeastern India, the greater adjutant stork has been considered an ill omen for generations. (16m 40s)
Video has Closed Captions
One cougar’s legacy in the heart of Hollywood. (13m 56s)
The Great Ocean Cleanup | WILD HOPE
Video has Closed Captions
Inventor Boyan Slat is on a mission to rid oceans of plastic. (15m 12s)
Video has Closed Captions
The decades-long fight to save America’s black-footed ferrets. (18m 11s)
Video has Closed Captions
Frogs are going extinct - here's how we can save them. (16m 8s)
Video has Closed Captions
Jaguar populations are falling worldwide, but the big cats are thriving in Belize. (13m 3s)
Video has Closed Captions
Fernanda Abra leads an initiative along Brazil's roadways, where vehicles kill 475 million animals. (9m 16s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipHANNAH: I was hunting a few years ago in Montana and I actually found a golden eagle that at the time I thought was electrocuted.
When I got it to the Raptor Rehab Center, she called me later and said, "Hey, you know, this bird has lead poisoning from gut piles with all these lead fragments in it."
These migrating scavengers come in and they're gonna gorge themselves on it.
Immediately that day I went and switched to a lead-free bullet.
It was a really visceral experience and I don't know how anyone could not change after seeing that kind of thing.
(wings flapping) ♪ ♪ BRYAN: Raptors are some of our most iconic wildlife species.
(bird call) We've got eagles, hawks, falcons, harriers, osprey, and owls.
NARRATOR: Raptor ecologist, hunter and conservationist Bryan Bedrosian is no stranger to these magnificent birds of prey.
But after two decades of studying these predators in the greater Yellowstone ecosystem, he has a favorite.
BRYAN: Golden eagles, besides for the fact that they're ridiculously cool and amazing creatures, are really good indicators of ecosystem health.
NARRATOR: As predators and scavengers, they're vulnerable to pollutants that can get into the food chain.
(airplane flight noises) In the 1940s through 60s, eagle populations were decimated by the pesticide DDT.
When they ate prey contaminated with it, the DDT affected their reproduction, causing thinner eggshells and fewer hatchlings.
BRYAN: And once we identified that and removed that from the system, those populations were able to rebound.
NARRATOR: Today, golden eagle numbers in the western United States have bounced back to between 20 and 30 thousand, but they still face significant threats.
(wings beating) Bryan is concerned about one in particular.
BRYAN: One of the things we've been looking at for years is the incidence of lead poisoning.
I can tell you firsthand, it is ridiculously saddening to walk up on one of the most iconic species in the world, face down in the dirt wings spread open, and you know that bird suffered to death.
NARRATOR: Through long-term studies, Bryan has documented what happens when eagles accidentally ingest lead fragments.
(footsteps) BRYAN: The hunter uses a lead-based bullet.
When that bullet collides with the animal that they're hunting, the deer, the elk, the antelope, it releases about 40% of that lead.
And that lead just gets dispersed like a dust cloud within that animal up to 18 inches surrounding the trajectory of that bullet.
We don't want to take the guts home with us because that's not what we're gonna eat.
We leave that for the animals out in the field.
(eagle chewing) NARRATOR: Scavengers like eagles and critically endangered California condors feed on these gut piles and carcasses.
BRYAN: It will shut down their digestive system.
It will ground the eagle so it can't fly anymore.
Its kidneys can fail, it can cause paralysis, blindness, seizures.
NARRATOR: And even death.
(labored breathing) Studies show that nearly half of golden and bald eagles in the United States have elevated levels of lead in their blood.
It's also the leading cause of death in California condors, whose population once reached an all-time low of 22.
(wings flapping) Captive breeding has saved them from extinction, but the threat remains.
Bryan and his colleagues are on a crucial mission to protect eagles and other raptors from lead poisoning.
(bird calls) Their job requires consistent monitoring of the birds.
BRYAN: We are on what we call the Golden Eagle Highway.
So thousands of eagles are migrating down here into the United States from Canada and Alaska.
NARRATOR: Safely catching a golden eagle is a challenging task.
They can see prey - and suspicious humans - from miles away.
BRYAN: We show them some bait, and then they'll come to get a meal.
ROB: And we just have two, two nets out there.
One blind, one box on the mountain, and a very dedicated crew and amazing things are happening.
STEP: I got an eagle down mid-valley.
BRYAN: Alright.
♪ STEP: It's circling, young one.
♪ Rising up.
♪ Starting to slide over to the ridge.
♪ Coming onto blow-out.
All right.
BRYAN: Come on, buddy.
STEP: Alright.
♪ Oh!
BRYAN: Georgia, get down!
♪ (wings flapping) NARRATOR: Once the eagle is safely captured, Bryan places a hood over her eyes to help calm her down.
BRYAN: Alright, got her.
When you've got a species that migrates across the continent, it takes a lot of data to really understand what's going on.
NARRATOR: Bryan and his team carefully band the bird, collect measurements BRYAN: One, two, three, go.
NARRATOR: And most importantly, take a small blood sample to check for lead.
♪ He's noticed some consistent trends.
BRYAN: Literally the opening weekend of big game season, those lead levels skyrocket.
And then after hunting season's over, we know that the lead levels drop because there is no more gut piles.
NARRATOR: A clear correlation.
BRYAN: The way lead works is if just like the bird, if I eat lead, it's gonna circulate in my blood for two weeks, and then it will go into my tissues, and then it will be absorbed into my brain and bone marrow for the rest of my life.
NARRATOR: If there are high levels of lead in the blood, it means the birds have ingested it recently.
BRYAN: We identified the problem in eagles.
And as a biologist and as a scientist, I published those papers.
NARRATOR: But that was just step one.
In order to reduce the raptors' exposure to lead, he needed to spark behavior change - convincing hunters to switch to lead-free ammunition.
BRYAN: Fast forward 10, 15 years, we have states that have mandated lead-free, and it's become a very divisive topic.
It's us versus them.
It's a hunters are bad, or they're trying to take my guns.
I'm a huge hunter, I'm a conservationist, and I just knew the right answer, which was education.
And so I started Sporting Lead-Free.
NARRATOR: Sporting Lead-Free is a grassroots, hunter-led initiative to encourage use of non-lead ammunition such as steel, brass, or copper.
♪ HANNAH: I didn't get into hunting until my adult age.
They call us adult- onset hunters.
In Sporting Lead-Free, I've found so many other hunters who have the same value system wanting to be out there to connect with our ecosystem and our food.
We like to say that hunters are the original conservationists.
And so to make that true, we need to be aware of what's happening beyond the bullet.
NARRATOR: Bryan and Hannah host educational workshops, partner with national sporting goods retailers, and recruit ambassadors to raise awareness about lead-free options.
HANNAH: Most of the time, we're not learning about this in hunter education and so that's where we're coming in.
If you have a bunch of lead ammunition, use that at the range, but as soon as that's gonna hit the ecosystem in any way, that's when we ask you to switch to a lead-free alternative.
NARRATOR: They use ballistic demonstrations to show hunters why lead bullets can do so much damage.
HANNAH: Most hunters don't actually go to the range and shoot ballistic gels.
We shoot at paper.
And so a lot of folks don't realize that lead ammunition fragments.
When a lead bullet hits its target, lead is really soft.
So it begins to fragment into hundreds, if not thousands of tiny pieces as it goes through that animal.
NARRATOR: Copper, which is growing in popularity as a non-lead alternative, often stays in one piece.
(gunshot) HANNAH: From a performance standpoint, you don't want your bullet to fragment.
(gunshot) You want it to stay together to get the most ethical kill.
(scanner woosh) NARRATOR: Under an X-ray, the difference in fragmentation is even more clear.
BRYAN: This is the ballistics gel on top that we shot with the lead bullet.
It's all those microscopic little fragments.
The greatest concentration of that lead is right at that entrance and that exit.
And that's where the birds are feeding because they can't get through the hide.
HANNAH: In this red circle here, that's 20 milligrams of lead, that is enough to kill an adult bald eagle.
And when we think about how much of those can get left in a gut pile, it's pretty eye-opening.
(meat sizzling) NARRATOR: Lead can also end up in the meat hunters bring home.
Consumption of the tainted meat can lead to spikes in blood lead levels and potential health risks.
BRYAN: As your young kids or kids in utero are developing, that's where the greatest risk is.
NARRATOR: As an alternative that's safer for both people and birds, (camera shutter) copper bullets have come a long way since they first arrived on the market.
BRYAN: The development of lead-free options has skyrocketed.
Just like any technology, that technology is evolving, it's getting better, it's getting cheaper, and we're at the point now where we have great copper, and other lead- free alternatives.
NARRATOR: Because of public awareness campaigns like Sporting Lead-Free, many major manufacturers now produce non-lead ammo in a wide variety of calibers.
SOL: ...dialing in your hunting rifle for copper.
BRYAN: For years I handed out free and discounted non-lead ammunition to hunters.
The first year 25% of hunters use non-lead ammo, guess what?
The eagle lead levels dropped by 24%.
The next year, 32, 33%.
We know it works.
NARRATOR: And their movement is growing.
HANNAH: I believe we're in 47 of the 50 states.
We have members not only in the United States but in Canada, Australia, Italy.
It is a worldwide issue and the fact that we're really getting that messaging in the United States to take off has been awesome.
ROB: It's hard to wrap around solutions for a lot of major conservation issues.
But here, as individuals, we can make a difference.
BRYAN: And that's what gets me out of bed every day, knowing that everything we do to use lead free options out there is helping a bird.
That gives me a ridiculous amount of hope.
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
Major support for NATURE is provided by The Arnhold Family in memory of Henry and Clarisse Arnhold, The Fairweather Foundation, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III, Kate W. Cassidy Foundation, Kathy...