Bald eagle photo by Ken Lockwood, Eagle Valley Raptor Center.
Lead-poisoned bald eagle photo courtesy The Raptor Center, University of Minnesota.
Bald eagle with sternal recumbancy from lead poisoning, photo courtesy The Raptor Center, University of Minnesota.
Buckshot in bald eagle stomach, photo courtesy Wildlife Center of Virginia.
Lateral view of buckshot in bald eagle stomach, photo courtesy Wildlife Center of Virginia.
Lead pellets in rabbit injested by bald eagle, photo courtesy Wildlife Center of Virginia.
Lateral view of lead pellets in rabbit injested by bald eagle, photo courtesy Wildlife Center of Virginia.
Lead shot in vulture, photo courtesy Wildlife Center of Virginia.
Lead-poisoned Judson Lake trumpeter swan photo courtesy SaveTheSwans.ca.
Lead-poisoned Judson Lake trumpeter swan photo courtesy SaveTheSwans.ca.
Immature bald eagle photo courtesy College of Veterinary Medicine, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington.
One of the radiographs from Hunt et al. (2005) of 38 deer shot with lead bullets, showing extensive fragmentation.
Radiograph from Hunt et al. (2006) shows lead fragmentation in thorax of white-tailed deer killed by a standard copper-jacketed, lead-core, soft-point hunting bullet.
X-ray from Hunt et al. (2009) shows wide dispersal of lead fragments in the body cavity of a deer killed using standard lead-core, copper-jacketed bullet.
Radiograph from Knopper et al. (2006) of a ground squirrel shot with a 0.22 rimfire hollow-point bullets, showing lead fragmentation