| Literature DB >> 32451970 |
Vernon G Thomas1, Deborah J Pain2, Niels Kanstrup3, Rhys E Green4.
Abstract
Each year, hunters from 12 of the 27 European Union (EU) countries and the UK shoot over 6 million large game mammals, 12 million rabbits and hares and over 80 million birds. They support an international game meat market worth over 1.1 thousand million Euros. Animals shot with lead ammunition frequently contain lead fragments in the carcass which contaminate meals made from game meat with concentrations of lead substantially above the maximum allowable level (ML) set by European Commission Regulation EC1881/2006 for meat from domesticated animals. This poses a health risk to frequent consumers of wild-shot game meat, with children and pregnant women being particularly vulnerable. Total replacement of lead rifle and shotgun ammunition with available non-toxic alternatives is needed for all hunting in EU nations to prevent exposure of humans and wildlife to ammunition-derived lead and to allow the depletion of the long-term environmental legacy of lead from spent ammunition. We propose that EC1881/2006 is amended to incorporate an ML for game meats as a supplementary measure to the replacement of lead ammunition. This would harmonise food safety standards for lead in meats traded across and imported into the EU.Entities:
Keywords: Europe; Game meat; Hunting; International trade; Regulation; Scavengers
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32451970 PMCID: PMC7568734 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-020-01336-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Annual numbers of wild mammals shot in 13 EU countriesa,b and tonnage of game produced. Data are taken from FAO (2018) and represent the most important game species hunted
| Species | Annual kill (number of countries that reported) | Annual tonnage (assumed weight of individual animals in kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Roe deer | 2 294 324 (13) | 45 886 (20) |
| Red deer | 480 464 (12) | 72 070 (150) |
| Fallow deer | 156 032 (12) | 9362 (60) |
| Wild boar | 2 218 687 (11) | 155 308 (70) |
| Brown hares | 2 039 436 (11) | 7750 (3.8) |
| Rabbit | 8 016 884 (7) | 16 033 (2) |
| Total mammal kill | 15 205 827 | 306 409 |
aCroatia, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Spain, Sweden, UK. The 13 countries that replied to the survey have 5 465 000 hunters (82%) of the 6 667 770 in the EU 28 as of 2010 (FACE 2010). Assuming that a similar number of mammals are killed per hunter by the remaining 18% of hunters, this gives an estimated kill of 6 282 841 large mammals and 12 269 575 brown hares and rabbits
bThe total kill of birds approaches 88 million in the EU, from the data of Hirschfeld et al. (2019) and Green and Pain (2015: for the UK) extrapolated to include all EU countries (see text). Data from FAO (2018) on bird kills were too sparse from many countries to allow reasonable representation
The annual tonnage and traded values of game meat reported by six EU nations in FAO (2018). These numbers refer to the principal species of mammals and birds involved in the game markets. The values in US$ were converted to Euros using the exchange factor 0.908
| Six nations reporting trade dataa | Traded quantity in tonnes/y | Traded value in million Euros/y | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Imports | Exports | Imports | Exports | |
| 70 881 | 127 696 | 178.22 | 298.36 | |
aCroatia, Finland, Lithuania, Poland, Spain, Sweden
The 6 EU countries that reported trade data have 1 771 000 hunters (26.56%) of the 6 667 770 reported in the EU in 2010 (FACE 2010). Assuming a direct relationship between the numbers of hunters and the level of export trade gives an estimated export trade value in excess of 1123 million Euros a year for the whole of the EU
Fig. 1Radiograph of a roe deer shot with a single unbonded lead rifle bullet, showing the extent of the bullet’s fragmentation and the distance of fragments’ spread from the entry site. Most of the small fragments would not likely be removed prior to butchering and retail sale, thereby exposing the consumer.
Photo credit, Oliver Krone, Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Berlin, Germany
Fig. 2X-ray of a woodpigeon illustrating four gunshot and numerous small radio-dense fragments. Radio-dense fragments may trace the passage of shot through the bird; some fragments are close to bone suggesting fragmentation on impact, others are not. Reproduced from Fig. 1 of Pain et al. (2010)