In the last three weeks, biologists from the California Department of Fish & Game have discovered two endangered California condors, - known as No. 286 and No. 375, respectively - with shotgun pellets lodged in their wings and bodies. The California condor is listed as an endangered species and is protected by both federal and state laws. Although both birds remain alive, their survival is uncertain.
In hopes of indentifying those responsible for injuring the highly protected condors, San Francisco-based Center for Biological Diversity is offering a $30,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible. Of that $30,000, Santa Barbara’s Wendy P. McCaw Foundation, run by the owner of the Santa Barbara News-Press contributed $25,000 after hearing of the second shooting.
This is not the first time McCaw’s foundation has donated funds for the protection and preservation of the endangered California condor. According to Adam Keats, director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s Urban Wildlands Program, the McCaw Foundation was instrumental in bringing to justice the man responsible for shooting and killing California condor AC-8 in 2003. The sizable reward offered by McCaw and her foundation in that incident, Keats asserted, motivated people to track down the condor’s killer. Keats went on to say the McCaw Foundation was also extremely influential during the successful 2008 effort to ban hunters from using lead-containing ammunition within condor populated areas - condors would eat animals that had been killed or wounded with lead ammo and subsequently become ill or die from lead poisoning. “The McCaw Foundation was one of the single-most important factors in getting the lead out of California,” Keats explained.
However, when it comes to explaining the reasons or motivations behind the recent shooting of the two birds, both of which were part of a Big Sur flock, Keats is at a loss. “I simply can’t fathom how or why a person could do something like this. You have to be really sick to be able to shoot one of these birds. I just don’t get it.” He went on, “Shooting these birds hurts us all - from the folks who have worked so hard to bring the condor back from the brink of extinction to everybody who has ever seen one of these giant birds soaring in the California sky.” There isn’t any new information in the search for the shooter, but Keats seems optimistic that the reward money will speed the investigation, “We are hopeful that the establishment of this reward will help investigators find those responsible.”
Anyone with information regarding the shooting is encouraged to call the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service at (916) 414-6660 or the California Department of Fish and Game’s CalTIP Program at 1-888-DFG-CALTIP. More information on the California condor is available at savethecondors.org.
Tyler Hayden is an Independent intern.


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What is wrong with people!? What kind of malfunction makes someone start shooting condors? Sad.
ilovesb09 (anonymous profile)
April 10, 2009 at 7:45 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Animals become extinct for a reason, it's the process of evolution. To attack hunters for using lead in bullets was stupid. If you're going to go that far might as well attack building construction, lead-acid batteries, bullets and shot, weights, and is part of solder, pewter, fusible alloys and radiation shields. Think that fancy computer you're using has no lead in it? Wrong there is solder all over that pc board, lead is everywhere. What about the last time you went to the dentists and he put that heavy shield on you to protect you from the x-ray radiation, next time just tell the dentist No, I don't need that shield today, and get your x-ray done. Think before you get stupid and attack 1 small branch of lead users. Lead-acid batteries are just too convenient for us to do without them but they run on toxic chemical cocktails that are dumped into landfill sites and the environment. That being said did the state tell the condors to not eat at the local landfills?
JrockSB (anonymous profile)
April 10, 2009 at 2:31 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Condors are not known to eat batteries or all those other lead-leaking things cited. They do eat carcasses of animals killed, often by bullets with lead. I don't believe they eat at landfills....
Unfortunately, most of the reasons that animals recently have become extinct is because of the extremely rapid (geologically speaking) proliferation of the dominant animal, human beings, that are carelessly wiping out habitat of other species, including plant species that are to be beneficial to humans.
As for the condors, I think we humans have an obligation to try to reverse the damage some of us do and I applaud Ms. McCaw and her foundation for their work.
citti (anonymous profile)
April 12, 2009 at 6:44 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Senseless killing is a HUMAN trait, we all have it and we all use it at one time or another but random injuring Condors with Shotgun pellets is just malicious mischief that borders on evil hate. These birds are NOT our enemies, they are natures collectors of leavings and waste, left from the dead. They are NOT an aggressive bird and by that, they don't attack or defend their "kills" (rotting animal carcass), they fly off and return when the threat has passed.
I strongly believe it's one of those ignorant S.O.B.'s who will shoot at anything when the booze kicks in (all day beer drinkers) or a couple of Juvenile's out with daddies shotgun shooting at living creatures for fun and kicks, cause "it's funny when things die".
Then again, it might be someone who miss-took the Condor for a Vulture and shot towards it, to frighten it away.
In any case, someone who is out shooting birds is probably a danger to everyone else and needs to be apprehended with extreme caution, if they shoot at birds, they'll shoot at humans.
dou4now
dou4now (anonymous profile)
April 12, 2009 at 8:19 p.m. (Suggest removal)