California Condor
California Condor, Photo: Scott Frier / U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
California Condor, Photo: Scott Frier / USFWS

Defenders in Action: Lead Poisoning

Defenders is proud to be one of the many groups that helped bring the condor back from extinction, but challenges remain. The threat of lead poisoning from hunter ammunition has largely been addressed in California, but it is still a problem in neighboring states.

The Problem

In Arizona, hunters are still permitted to use lead bullets, which can poison condors that eat the dead animals or the entrails also called “gut piles”) left behind after carcasses are cleaned by hunters in the field.

How We're Helping

Along with other conservation groups, Defenders has asked the courts to push the U.S. Forest Service to ban the use of lead bullets for hunting on Forest Service land, much of which serves as important condor habitat.

Where We Are Today

Defenders’ legal case to ban the use of lead bullets on Forest Service land is still pending before the courts.
 

More on California Condor: Defenders in Action: Condor Habitat »

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Where We Work
The Golden state is home to millions of wild birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles and fish that need our help.
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Habitat Conservation
Defenders of Wildlife is working to protect and strengthen the National Wildlife Refuge System, the only system of federal lands in the United States dedicated to wildlife conservation.
California Condor, Photo: Scott Frier / USFWS
Fact Sheet
The California condor (Gymnogyps californianus) is the largest terrestrial bird in North America. It is black in color and sports a bald head with very few feathers.