| Literature DB >> 30879269 |
Deborah J Pain1,2, Ian Dickie3, Rhys E Green4, Niels Kanstrup5, Ruth Cromie6.
Abstract
A proposed European Union (EU)-wide restriction on the use of lead gunshot for shooting in and over wetlands estimated that the societal benefits of a restriction outweighed costs, despite few identified benefits being quantified economically. A subsequent Annex XV Investigation Report on the evidence of impacts of lead ammunition in terrestrial environments concluded that additional measures to control its use are warranted, although to date this has not been further evaluated. To help inform this process, we review the literature and undertake new analyses to estimate the costs of continued use of lead ammunition associated with impacts on wildlife, people and the environment. We estimate minimum annual direct costs across the EU and Europe of c. €383 million-€960 million and €444 million-€1.3 thousand million respectively. The value that society places on being able to avoid these losses, estimated using a 'willingness to pay' approach, was c. €2.2 thousand million for wildfowl alone. Our estimated costs of the continued use of lead ammunition across the EU appear to be considerably greater than the likely costs of switching to non-toxic alternative ammunition types, although these have not been formally estimated in full.Entities:
Keywords: Birds; Bullets; Evaluation; Financial; Gunshot; Society
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30879269 PMCID: PMC6675822 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01157-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Estimated replacement costs of common pheasants and red-legged partridges affected by lead shot from ammunition sources in the UK
| % hunter shot birds with ingested shot | Number of shot ingesteda | Hunting bias correctionb | Percentage with ingested gunshot after hunting bias correction | Percentage with ingested shot corrected for turnoverc | Increase in annual mortality for birds with ingested shotd | Percentage of population estimated as dyinge | Populationf | Number of birds estimated as dying | Cost of replacement | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pheasant | 3.0 | 1 | 1.5 | 2.00 | 12.4 | 0.045 | 0.558 | 37 800 000 | 210 924 | €3.132 million | Butler et al. ( |
| Red-legged partridge | 1.4 | 1 | 1.5 | 0.93 | 7.2 | 0.045 | 0.323 | 6 665 000 | 21 478 | €0.319 million | Butler ( |
| Total | 232 402 | €3.451 million |
Assumptions:
aAs we do not know how many shot are ingested, we assume that only one shot is ingested
bWe assume that the increased likelihood of a hunter killing a terrestrial gamebird that has ingested a lead gunshot is the same as a mallard that has ingested a lead gunshot. If terrestrial gamebirds are less sensitive to the effects of lead, then hunters will be less likely to kill a pheasant that has ingested lead
cWe use a hunting season of 124 days in the UK for pheasant (1 Oct–1 Feb) and 154 days for red-legged partridge (1 September–1 February) and a turnover rate of shot in the gizzard of 20 days—i.e. 124/20 = 6.2 for pheasant; 154/20 = 7.7 for red-legged partridge)
dDue to the possibility of decreased sensitivity of terrestrial gamebirds to lead-shot impacts, we have used an arbitrary increase in annual mortality caused by lead-shot ingestion of 50% of that calculated for mallard (Bellrose 1959)
ePercentage with ingested shot corrected for hunting bias and turnover multiplied by increase in annual mortality
fAssumes that 35 million pheasants and 6.5 million red-legged partridges are released each year (PACEC 2006), although this is likely to be an underestimate as numbers of released birds are reported to have increased (Aebischer 2013). We added on breeding numbers from Musgrove et al. (2013) assuming a ratio of male to breeding female pheasants of 1:4.6 and that each red-legged partridge territory equalled 2 birds. We multiplied by the production cost of each pheasant released of €14.85 (£12.55; Savills 2017), and assumed that this was similar for red-legged partridges
Estimated replacement costs of selected raptor species killed by lead poisoning from ammunition sources in the European Union and throughout Europe
| Species | Population (pairs) | Annual adult survivalb | Numbers of adults (individuals) estimated to die annually | Percentage of mortality estimated from lead poisoningc | Numbers of adults estimated to die annually from lead poisoning | Replacement cost (€48 108 per adult) | Replacement cost (€661 284 per adult) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White-tailed eagle | 4202; 10 650 | 0.90–0.95 | 420–840; 1066–2130 | 22 | 92–184; 234–468 | €4.4–8.9 million; €11.3–22.5 million | €61.1–122.3 million; €154.9–309.9 million | Isomursu et al. ( |
| Golden eagle | 5300; 10 800 | 0.87 | 1378; 2808 | 5–10 | 69–138; 140–281 | €3.3–6.6 million; €6.8–13.5 million | €45.6–91.1 million; €92.8–185.7 million | Ganz et al. ( |
| Griffon vulture | 32 350; 33 400 | 0.97 (released—long-term estimate) | 1941; 2004 | 2.5 | 49; 50 | €2.3 million; €2.4 million | €32.1 million; €33.1 million | Berny et al. ( |
| Red kite | 27 950; 29 300 | 0.92 (3rd year in absence of illegal killing) | 4472; 4688 | 7.15 | 320; 335 | €15.4 million; €16.1 million | €211.4 million; €221.7 million | Molenaar et al. ( |
| Total—EU; Europe | 530–691; 760–1135 | €25.4–33.2 million; €36.6–54.5 million | €350.2–456.9 million; €502.5–750.4 million |
aAdult populations (pairs) from BirdLife International (2015). The European Red List of Birds Supplementary Material. Adults are given as no or limited information is available for immature birds. However, total population sizes, estimates of numbers of birds that will die of lead poisoning, and replacement costs would be considerably larger
bRecent survival estimates used where possible. Where possible, these are for stable or increasing populations. This will result in an underestimate of mortality and costs
cFor white-tailed eagles, 22% of 740 dead birds is the average from four large studies in Finland, Germany and Sweden. For golden eagles, 9% of 55 birds in the Swiss Alps had liver Pb > 6 mg/kg (up to 80 mg/kg), and 30% of 46 birds had bone Pb > 20 mg/kg. We use a range of 5–10%, as has been found in the USA. For griffon vultures, a recent surveillance programme (French Pyrenees) reported 2.5% of 119 dead birds as lead poisoned. For red kites, 5.5% of 110 red kites (England) and 8.8% of 34 dead birds in the French Pyrenees died from lead poisoning (midpoint of 7.15%). Both immature and adult birds are included in these estimates
dThese are minimum costs because of the assumptions abovea,b. Costs are based on an analysis of what are considered to be cost-effective (supplementary feeding and translocation) and more costly (breeding and reintroduction) methods of replacing birds lost. These are based on Ferrer et al. (2017) who calculated that for a standard reintroduction programme of bearded vultures, releasing 10 young per year during 10 years, each one of the released young bred in captivity costs around €146 805 compared with €10 680 for each young bird that originated from a food-supplemented wild population. The activities undertaken to reintroduce or supplement populations of many raptor species, and thus their costs, are broadly similar. The proportion of fledgling birds that survive to reproductive age has been shown to be relatively constant in wild bird populations (Ricklefs 2000; see also Fig. 7.1 of Green 2002), with a mean value of 0.222. To obtain the cost of replacing one dead adult, we therefore divided the cost of producing an immature by 0.222 to give replacement costs per adult of €661 284 and €48 108, respectively
Value transfer—comparing policy good context and study good context(s)
| Selection criteria | Hanley et al. ( | ECHA policy site and good | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| I. Similarity of the study good and policy good | Avoided loss of goose populations | Avoided loss in all species of wildfowl populations (due to decrease in lead poisoning mortality) | Similar |
| II. Similarity of the change in provision of the study good and policy good | 10% population decrease | 6.1% population decrease | Adjust values for different % level of loss |
| III. Similarity of the sites where the study good and policy good are found | Goose habitats across Scotland, UK | Wildfowl habitats across EU Member States | Similar |
| IV. Similarity of the affected human populations | Scotland population (households) 2001 | EU population (households) 2017 | Sites are similar, but adjust for number of households, and disposable income per household |
| V. Similarity of the number and quality of substitutes for the study good and policy good | Substitutes (other wildfowl and bird species are conserved) | Some substitutes (other bird species are conserved) | Similar |
| VI. Similarity of the study good and policy good market constructs | Public good | Public good | Similar |
| VII. Study quality | A robust study with a full account of validity and potential biases in estimates | N/A | Good quality |
Estimated costs of research over a 5-year period (Feb 2013–Jan 2018) related to the impacts lead ammunition on humans, domestic and wild animals and the environment in Europe
| Type of study | Number of studies (Feb 2013–Jan 2018) | Indicative cost (€) per type of study | Total cost (€) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Desk-based studies | 5 | 14 000 | 70 000 |
| Lab/fieldwork-based studies | 49 | 44 000 | 2 156 000 |
| Large studies with metadata analysis | 4 | 57 000 | 228 000 |
| Total | 55 | – | 2 454 000 |
1. The total number of studies is limited to just published peer reviewed European studies carried out over the last 5 years. Studies have been gathered from Web of Science (23.08.18) and limited to research on (i) wildlife populations, (ii) domestic animals, (iii) human health, and (iv) environmental contamination. Search terms used were: lead and shot and bird; lead and bullet and bird; lead and ammunition and bird; lead and ammunition and human; blood and lead and domestic/livestock; blood and lead and game; lead and ammunition and pollution. It also excludes research on non-toxic alternatives to lead shots (i.e. focuses on the problem rather than studies on the solution)
2. The indicative cost per type of study (2016 prices) was determined using expert judgement by calculating the number of days required per type of resource required (e.g. fieldworkers, technician, research associates, senior researchers, veterinarians/medics), lab equipment and lab analysis required and a standard full cost recovery university overhead factor. The results have been verified through informal consultation with those who carry out such fieldwork and lab analysis
Summary of selected additive cost estimates of continued use of lead ammunition across the EU and Europe
| Cost Area | Description | Annual cost (€) EU | Annual cost (€) Europe | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wildlife | ||||
| Replacement costs—direct mortality | Replacement of 700 000 wildfowl (EU) or 1 million (Europe) of 16 species | €105 million | €142 million | Andreotti et al. ( |
| Replacement of 4 species of raptor in the EU (530–691 individuals) and Europe (765–1139 individuals) | €25–457 million | €37–750 million | This paper, Table | |
| Replacement of 232 402 released pheasants and red-legged partridges in the UK | Costs for UK only—€3.4 million Not estimated for EU | Not estimated but > €3.4 million | This paper, Table | |
| Replacement of an additional 11 wildfowl species; 12 raptor species, 11 other waterbird and wading species and 2 terrestrial gamebirds known to suffer lead poisoning but for which insufficient information was available to estimate replacement costs | Not estimated | Not estimated | Andreotti et al. ( | |
| Replacement costs—indirect mortality | Birds that die as a result of sublethal lead poisoning increasing susceptibility to disease and accidents | Not estimated | Not estimated | e.g. Kelly and Kelly ( |
| Treatment costs | Costs for treating 1% of 700 000 lead-poisoned wildfowl in the EU and 1 million in Europe, plus 1% of an additional 2.1 (EU) and 3 million (Europe) that suffer sublethal welfare effects | €28 million | €40 million | This paper; ECHA ( |
| Costs of treating raptors and terrestrial birds that suffer lead poisoning | Not estimated | Not estimated | ||
| People | ||||
| Reduced IQ in children | Minimum annual costs of risk of reduced IQ in children in the EU that frequently consume game shot with lead. Surveys from other countries suggest that this may be an underestimate, possibly by an order of magnitude | €40–104 million | Not estimated but > €40–104 million | This paper |
| Increased incidence of CKD and SBP in adults | Not estimated | Not estimated | ||
| Environment | ||||
| Clean-up | Ammunition at shooting ranges—broad estimate | €81–162 million | Not estimated but > €81–162 million | This paper |
| Clean-up | Ammunition at hunting blinds with greatest contamination—broad estimate | c. €100 million | Not estimated but > c. €100 million | This paper |
| Other costs | ||||
| Research | Investigating lead poisoning; monitoring and surveillance | € 1 million | Not estimated but > € 1 million | This paper, Table |
| Advocacy | Not estimated | Not estimated | ||
| Enforcement | Not estimated | Not estimated | ||
| Collision | Collision of poisoned birds with power lines, other infrastructure and vehicles due to weakened state | Not estimated | Not estimated | Kelly and Kelly ( |
| Food production | Poisoning of poultry and livestock exposed to lead shot or feed contaminated with lead shot; other food products (e.g. salt) contaminated with shot; wastage of meat around the wound channel of large mammals killed with lead bullets | Not estimated | Not estimated | Payne et al. ( |
| Health of domestic dogs | Risks to dogs fed trimmings from shot game animals | Not estimated | Not estimated | VKM ( |
| Total | €383 million–€960 million | €444 million–€1.30 thousand million | ||