With mounting evidence of damage to loons, eagles and other wildlife, environmental groups are asking the state to try again to outlaw or limit the use of lead in fishing gear, birdshot and rifle bullets.
Their petition, filed last month with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, would require hunters to use steel, copper or other nontoxic ammunition during all hunting seasons throughout the state. It also asks the DNR to ban lead jigs and fishing tackle from lakes that have nesting loons.
Lead jigs and sinkers can poison loons when the birds scoop them up on lake bottoms while they are searching for pebbles to help them digest their food. Eagles can be poisoned when they eat "gut piles" left by hunters who shoot deer with lead shot and then dress them in the wild.
"The science is indisputable," said Tom Casey, chairman of Friends of Minnesota Scientific and Natural Areas, which filed the petition along with the Isaak Walton League and Friends of the Mississippi River, among other groups. "We've banned the use of lead in paint, in toys and in pretty much every other consumer product."
Lead ammunition has been banned on federal wetlands since the early 1990s. Duck and geese hunters are prohibited from using toxic shot across the United States. But Minnesota has never regulated the use of lead for taking other birds, small game or deer. Nor has it regulated lead in fishing tackle.
In a long-running education campaign, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) has encouraged hunters and anglers to switch to nontoxic gear. But there's little evidence that campaign has made much difference.
In 2015, the state released a study of more than 130 loons that had been found dead over the course of several years, said Carrol Henderson, the now-retired longtime leader of the DNR's nongame wildlife program. More than 11% of the loons had died of lead poisoning.
Around that same time, scientists published a paper in the peer-reviewed Journal of Wildlife Management, which found that lead tackle killed more than 40% of all loons that had been found dead in New Hampshire.