New tackle regulations protect loons from lead

     Lead poisoning has long been the leading cause of death for adult loons in Maine. In order to protect loons from lead poisoning from the ingestion of lead fishing tackle, laws that began in September have made it illegal in Maine to sell bare (unpainted) lead-headed jigs less than 2.5” long. 

     In September 2017, the state will also ban the use of these jigs. Although painted lead jigheads are equally harmful to loons (the paint wears off in a matter of days in the loon’s acidic gizzard), the current regulations exclude them.

     According to Maine Audubon, lead poisoning was responsible for almost one-third of the documented mortality of adult loons in Maine prior to the implementation of the state’s first lead regulations in 2002. 

     “Adult loons either ingest lead when they catch fish with lead sinkers and jigs attached, or they pick up lead objects while eating the gravel they need to digest their food from lake bottoms,” said Susan Gallo, Maine Audubon wildlife biologist. Ingested objects like sinkers and jigs stay in loon gizzards, wearing down and elevating lead levels in blood and body tissues. Loons usually die from lead poisoning in a matter of weeks.

     After lawmakers passed An Act to Protect Maine’s Loons by Banning Lead Sinkers and Jigs (LD 730) in 2013, Maine Audubon, along with many partners including the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife (DIFW),  Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine, Bass Nation and the Maine Lakes Society, created the Fish Lead-Free Initiative, a coalition with the goal of helping anglers make the switch to lead-free tackle.

     “We wanted to get the word out to anglers that making the switch to lead-free can be easy now that there are so many products available for purchase in local stores and online,” said Gallo, who is spearheading the initiative. “Using lead-free tackle will make an enormous difference for loons. We are already seeing a significant reduction in loon mortality.”

     Fish Lead-Free conducts outreach efforts to educate the public about the importance of fishing with lead-free tackle, including a website (fishleadfree.org) that outlines Maine’s tackle regulations and lists retailers and online outlets where lead-free tackle can be purchased. 

     Fish Lead-Free also hosts tackle exchanges and provides interested individuals or community groups with lead exchange “kits” stocked with lead-free tackle that can be given out at public events, like fishing derbies or tournaments. Plus, Fish Lead-Free has provided 350 tackle boxes stocked with lead-free tackle to the DIFW Hooked on Fishing Program.

     New Hampshire was the first state to join Maine, creating outreach materials that integrate the Fish Lead Free logo and standard messaging. And last year, four more states contributed information to the Fish Lead-Free website to let anglers know of state-specific tackle regulations and local lead-free tackle sources.

     “We’re so glad to see the loon protection regulations phased in and want to help anglers comply with the new laws,” said Gallo.

     For more information, visitwww.fishleadfree.org.