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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2282/794

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Title: Efficacy of cartridge type and projectile design in the harvest of beaver
Authors: Parker, Howard
Rosell, Frank
Danielsen, Johan
Issue Date: 2006
Publishers version: http://dx.doi.org/10.2193/0091-7648(2006)34[127:EOCTAP]2.0.CO;2
Abstract: In Norway, Sweden, and Finland most beavers (Castor spp.) harvested are shot with center-fire rifles. Shooting entails problems not encountered in trapping including pelt damage from bullet holes (body shots are common) and escape of wounded animals. It was predicted that beavers shot in the body with splinter projectiles designed to fragment after impact would experience fewer exit holes (i.e., less pelt damage) and less wounding, but more meat loss, than those shot with conventional controlled expansion projectiles. Twenty-two hunters shot 163 beavers during normal hunting. As predicted, exit frequency was lower for splinter (22%) than controlled expansion projectiles (95%) but neither wounding frequency nor meat damage varied significantly. The combined wounding frequency for both projectile types was 4.3%. Ninety-eight percent of the body-shot animals retrieved (n = 111) appeared to die instantly. Beaver hunting with center-fire rifles was considered humane.
Keywords: Ballistics
Caliber
Castor canadensis
Castor fiber
Eurasian beaver
Furbearer
Hunting
Meat
North American beaver
Norway
Pelt quality
Shooting
Wounding rare
Publisher: Wildlife Society
Document type: Journal article
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2282/794
Appears in Collections:Institutt for natur-, helse- og miljøvernfag

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