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Hunters slow to switch to copper bullets

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Many copper loads cost about twice as much as comparable lead cartridges, VanValkenburg said. He said hunters he has spoken to who switched to copper bullets did so at the urging of their wives. Kukull said hunters seeking copper bullets told her the same thing.

“Their wives said, ‘If you’re going to go hunting, you’re going to use non-toxic shot,’ ” she said.

VanValkenburg said some hunters have modified their shot placement on deer to minimize fragmentation of the lead bullets they’re using.

“They’re shooting behind the shoulder, trying not to hit areas that make the bullet explode,” he said. “And they will cut a wider girth around the bullet hole (when butchering the deer).”

Johnson has switched to copper bullets for deer hunting, although he said some calibers have been hard to find in stores. As a result, he has begun reloading his own cartridges, using copper bullets.

“I think there’s a fair number of hunters exploring (copper),” he said, “although not the majority by any means. Availability is No. 1: It’s hard to find. The second thing is, copper is only done in a premium cartridge. Because of that, the expense is high.”

After research came to light a few years ago revealing how much lead was found in ground venison, some food shelves no longer will accept venison if it has been taken by firearms.

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources discusses lead in venison on its website at www.mndnr.gov.

“Information discovered in spring 2008 indicates that small lead fragments often are present in hunter-harvested venison, particularly ground venison,” the DNR’s website states.

The DNR conducted its own study about lead fragmentation that same year.

“To date, no illnesses have been linked to consumption of lead particles in hunter-harvested venison. But the DNR recognizes that the potential impacts of lead fragments ingested when eating hunter-harvested game are not well understood. Only now are state and federal health, wildlife and food safety agencies beginning to collect, study and analyze data to determine exactly what those impacts may be,” says a statement on the DNR’s website.

The DNR’s study includes this information for hunters:

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