The images 
in the following program 
are highly sensitive 
and may be 
as disturbing to viewers 
as they were to us. 
However, we have to 
show the truth 
about cruelty to animals, 
praying that you will 
help to stop it.
On this week’s edition of 
Stop Animal Cruelty 
we’ll find out about 
the barbarous killing of 
our wonderful, noble 
feathered friend, the duck.  
Ducks are 
highly intelligent, 
have rich emotional 
and social lives and 
communicate through 
vocalizations 
called quacking. 
Ducks recognize 
one another through 
their distinctive quacks, 
and variations in the tone 
of a quack communicate 
different emotional states. 
A female duck 
sits on her eggs for up to 
28 days until they hatch. 
New hatchlings are able 
to swim just a few hours 
after birth, and can travel 
considerable distances 
to find water.
Ducks also form close 
bonds with other ducks 
and with animals 
of other species. 
In one case a male duck 
in Sweden became 
the foster father of 
five chicks after 
becoming enamored 
of their hen mother. 
In addition, ducks show 
altruism and cooperation, 
often flying in groups 
to protect and assist 
one another 
during long journeys. 
In one instance 
Dr. Arthur Peterson of 
Florida, USA found 
a male duck 
aiding his blind partner 
by giving her vocal cues 
to help her find her way 
around, thus acting as 
a “seeing-eye duck.” 
However, despite their 
compassionate natures, 
tens of millions of ducks 
are slaughtered 
in cold blood by 
so-called “sport hunters” 
each year. 
In the US alone, 
the animal welfare group 
In Defense of Animals 
estimates 14 million ducks 
are murdered 
by shooters annually. 
Besides being decimated 
by hunters, 
duck populations are 
facing tremendous pressure 
from their habitats 
being substantially 
reduced in size due to 
climate change, 
land development, 
and drought. 
Some birds can fly 
12,000 kilometers 
without stopping. 
It's amazing; they can 
navigate, they can fly day 
and they can fly night 
so you are dealing with 
intelligent species. 
All different species 
have their own sort of 
intelligence to suit 
their environment and 
it's amazing 
what birds can do, but 
of course when they come 
here to Victoria, 
there's a good chance 
that they will get shot 
either legally or illegally 
by duck shooters.   
Laurie Levy is 
the Campaign Director of 
the Coalition Against 
Duck Shooting, 
a non-profit group 
in Australia that 
for over 25 years has 
wholeheartedly strived to 
protect these beautiful, 
sensitive beings.
We started the campaign 
in 1986 to bring an end 
to the terrible injustice of 
guys going out there with 
semi-automatic shotguns 
and blowing away 
Australia's beautiful 
native waterbirds. 
And in those days 
Victoria was the capital 
of Australia as far as 
duck shooting went; 
we had something like 
95-100,000 duck shooters 
in this one state alone, and 
I believe the only way 
we could have an impact 
there was to get 
a lot of media coverage. 
And over the last 20 years 
the numbers of 
duck shooters in Victoria 
have declined from 95 to 
100,000 down to 20,000 
and that's due to 
public opinion and also 
in that time three other 
states in Australia, 
Western Australia, 
New South Wales and 
Queensland 
have already banned 
the recreational shooting 
of native waterbirds. 
A Morgan Research poll 
conducted in October 
2007 showed that 87% 
of Victorians want the 
recreational shooting of 
native waterbirds banned 
Duck shooting is 
a brutal practice with the 
sole objective of killing, 
maiming, injuring and 
capturing as many ducks 
as possible. 
Most hunters use 
shotguns to kill the birds, 
and some use 
semi-automatic weapons 
if allowed by law. 
A shotgun sprays 
hundreds of burning, 
piercing pellets 
at one time and increases 
the chances of injuring 
or killing a duck or any 
other bird in the vicinity. 
Typically when a flock of 
ducks takes to the air, 
a hunter will fire multiple 
shots at the flock, 
causing hundreds of 
red-hot pellets to 
spray into the birds’ 
fragile bodies and severely 
injure or kill them.
Those birds suffer 
horrific injuries. 
If you can imagine being 
blasted with a shotgun, 
duck shooters fire about 
200 pellets at them 
so anything from two 
or  three pellets to 200 
can hit a bird. 
Now, if two or three 
pellets hit, pellets can be 
lodged next to a nerve, 
or a bone, can shatter 
a bone so birds suffer 
shocking injuries. 
They get shot through 
the eye; you see them 
with their bills 
blown away.
They’re shot in the body, 
they have legs blown off, 
and it’s really a barbaric 
type of activity.
Depending on the size 
of the pellet, a duck 
will typically die when 
three to eight pellets 
directly hit him or her; 
however, many of 
the other birds caught 
in the radius of a shotgun 
blast may also be struck 
by the lethal pellets, 
causing 
tremendously painful and 
often crippling injuries. 
The mutilated birds may 
be able to continue flying 
in dire agony 
but will eventually die 
from their wounds 
in a slow, painful death.
For every hundred 
ducks shot, 
150 are injured and 
meet this gruesome fate. 
Yet other maimed ducks, 
unable to fly, 
fall to the ground and 
suffer further harm 
upon impact. 
The hunters then go 
in search of 
the downed animals and 
once they’re found, 
viciously shoot 
the helpless birds again 
or savagely twist and 
break their necks. 
Approximately 66% of 
ducks downed are not 
dead upon retrieval and 
those that are not located, 
face a slow, anguished 
death from bleeding, 
starvation, trauma, 
disease and exposure 
to the elements. 
According to research 
done in North America, 
20 to 40% of 
ducks and geese 
hit by shotgun pellets, 
regardless if they die 
immediately or 
are wounded, are never 
retrieved by shooters.
Due to the indiscriminate 
nature of shotgun blasts 
and the utter callousness 
of hunters, 
many non-targeted 
and protected birds 
are inadvertently killed 
in bird hunting. 
Furthermore, thousands 
of shotgun pellets, which 
are sometimes made of 
highly toxic lead, 
litter the wilderness and 
are accidently ingested 
by unsuspecting wildlife, 
who die from 
lead poisoning after weeks 
of unbearable suffering. 
Western Australia banned 
the recreational shooting 
of native waterbirds 
in 1990; 
that was followed in 1995 
by New South Wales, 
and Queensland then 
followed 10 years later 
in 2005 and they did it 
mainly because of the 
shocking cruelty involved 
in the shooting of 
native waterbirds. 
Shooters use shotguns, 
which are scatter guns 
and they only have 
a range of about 50 meters. 
They fire at birds that 
are out of range and 
they wound them and 
at least 25% of birds that 
are shot are wounded 
and those birds will 
fly away and 
die a slow death.
The Coalition Against 
Duck Shooting 
actively protects birds 
from shooters and 
treats those ducks and 
other waterfowl 
wounded by pellets.
Our rescue team this year 
will comprise of about 
200 members of the public 
who will go out 
to the wetlands. 
Our role is to move birds 
away from the shooters 
before the opening time 
and bring in 
any wounded birds. 
We have mobile 
veterinary clinics 
up on the wetlands and 
also to bring out any 
illegally shot, protected 
or threatened species 
that are shot. 
But in the early days, 
in the 1980's and 
early 1990's we would 
go to Lake Bolac 
in central Victoria and 
that wetland was about 
15 kilometers by 
about eight kilometers 
in those days and 
you would get 10-15,000 
duck shooters 
on one wetland. 
And it was frightening 
out there, birds were 
falling out of the sky, 
you had duck shooters 
in those days, using 
semi-automatic weapons 
so it was quite frightening 
but we used to bring out 
three or 400 wounded birds 
that were treated in our 
mobile veterinary clinics 
on that one weekend alone.
What drives waterfowl 
hunters to murder ducks 
and other birds? 
We asked Mr. Levy 
for his perspective.
I see duck shooters being 
similar to arsonists. 
Arsonists can’t help 
themselves when they 
start fires, even though 
they probably know that 
those fires are going to 
kill people possibly, 
it can kill wildlife 
and of course destroy 
the vegetation and 
the environment. 
Duck shooters also 
can’t help themselves and 
that’s why they illegally 
took water last year 
from the Latrobe River, 
they wanted birds to 
shoot and they were 
prepared to do anything 
to get those birds 
on their property to shoot. 
So native waterbirds 
have always had 
a really tough time 
and I don’t necessarily 
blame the shooters, 
because they can’t help 
themselves. 
But I do blame politicians 
that allow it to happen 
and politicians with 
one stroke of a pen 
could put a stop to 
that brutality and that 
suffering permanently 
as three other states 
in Australia 
have already done. 
What should we do if we 
discover a duck 
or other waterfowl 
that has been shot? 
What can we do to 
prevent them from being 
targeted by shooters 
in the first place? 
Mr. Levy has 
the following advice.
Take the bird to a vet, 
or ring the wildlife 
department 
in whatever country 
the bird is in because 
waterbird numbers 
right around the world 
are decreasing, 
mainly because of 
climate change
and it’s going to be a lot 
tougher in the future. 
So what people could do 
is just do what we’ve done, 
take people out 
to wetlands if 
duck shooting is allowed, 
wear bright-colored 
clothes, stop birds 
from being shot, and  
have mobile veterinary 
clinics on wetlands 
to deal with 
injured waterbirds.
If we speak out together 
against these atrocities, 
we can stop them. 
We can let others 
know about the cruelty 
perpetrated by 
bird hunters and write to 
community leaders and 
government officials 
to advocate for 
an immediate ban on 
this abhorrent activity. 
By raising awareness and 
voicing our disgust about 
such practices, we can 
ultimately abolish all 
forms of animal cruelty.
Laurie Levy, 
we truly appreciate what 
the Coalition Against 
Duck Shooting is doing 
in the state of Victoria 
to safeguard ducks and 
other waterfowl 
from shooters. 
May your ultimate goal 
of a hunting ban in 
Victoria soon be realized, 
with the result of 
several hundred thousand 
precious duck lives 
being saved each year.
For more information 
on the Coalition Against 
Duck Shooting, 
please visit 
www.Duck.org.au 
or connect with 
the Coalition at 
www.Facebook.com
Thank you for 
your presence today on 
Stop Animal Cruelty. 
May humanity soon learn 
to love all beings and live 
in peace and harmony.