Adart gunis anair riflethat fires adart.[1]The dart is tipped with ahypodermic needleand filled with asedative,[2]vaccine[3]orantibiotic.[4]A dart gun containing a sedative is called atranquillizer gun(also spelledtranquilizer gun,tranquilliser gunortranquiliser gun), derived from the word "tranquil", which means "calm".

A Dan Inject Model JM air rifle with a tranquillizer dart

History

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The modern dart gun was invented in the 1950s byNew ZealanderColin Murdoch.[5]While working with colleagues to study populations of deer and wild goats introduced toNew Zealand,he considered that killing the animals to examine them would be unnecessary if a dose of sedative could be administered by projection from afar. To that end, Murdoch went on to develop a range of rifles, darts, and pistols.

The first modern remote drug-delivery system was invented by scientists at the University of Georgia in the 1950s, and was the direct predecessor to the Cap-Chur equipment used worldwide for decades.[6]

In the early 1960s, a team inKenyaheaded by Drs.Tony PooleyandToni Harthoorndiscovered that various species, despite being of roughly equal size (for example, therhinocerosand thebuffalo), needed very different doses and spectra of drugs to safely immobilize them.

Since 1967, hollow bullets with sedatives for immobilization of wild animals began to be used in the USSR.[7]In the first half of the 1970s, experimental9×53mmRcartridges for immobilization of wild animals for 9mm "Los"bolt-action carbine and" flying dart "for 16 gauge shotguns were made and tested.[8]In the mid-1970s, "flying dart" for 12 gauge shotguns and experimental cartridges for immobilization of wild animals for theSPSh-44pistol were made and tested.[9]In the second half of the 1980s, the standard tranquillizer gun in the USSR was a single-shotIZh-18Mshotgun (a dart with a dose of sedative was fired with a blank cartridge).[10]

Characteristics

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The dart, usually.50 caliber (12.7 mm)[citation needed],is a ballisticsyringeloaded with a solution and tipped with ahypodermic needle.The dart is propelled from the gun by compressed gas, and it is stabilized in flight by a tailpiece consisting of a tuft of fibrous material. The needle may be plain or collared, with a barb-like ring to improve retention of the needle and syringe to assure that the full dose is administered.

Methods of driving injection upon impact include: gas compression, spring compression, explosive charge, orgas evolution reaction.[11]In one example, compressed air or butane in the rear of the dart pressurizes the solution, while the needle is capped to hold the fluid in place. Upon striking the target, the cap is pierced by the needle as it punctures the animal's skin. With the pressure released, the compressed gas pushes the solution out of the syringe and into the target (see diagrams fromVeterinary Technician).

Agents

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Several immobilizing drugs have been devised for use in tranquillizer darts.[12]If an animal is calm or in a position where it cannot attack, a slow-acting sedative will be used. These include:

If an animal is out of control, a fast-acting sedative will be used. These take between 2 and 8 minutes to take effect and include:

Antibiotics used in antibiotic darts vary by species.

Deer:

Fox:

Use on animals

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A dart gun may be used to sedate a dangerous target from a safe distance, such as in the cases ofdog catchers,wildlife officers,andpoachers;to medicate a target, such as in the case offarmersandranchers;or be used for both purposes, such as in the case ofzookeepersand wildlifeveterinarians.

Use on humans

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Police and prison use

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Tranquilizer darts are not generally included in policeless-than-lethalarsenals because a human can easily be wrestled to the ground, the pain induced by the dart may cause a suspect to pull out a weapon or panic and run until they are far away resulting in the officer having to track down the unconscious suspect,[13]a human can have a deadly allergic reaction to a sedative,[14]and because effective use requires an estimate of the target's weight—too little sedative will have no effect, and too much sedative will result in death, which can lead to a lawsuit or being convicted ofsecond-degree unintentional murderif the target is a human. "If you shot somebody that was small, it could kill them. If you shot somebody who was big or had drugs in their system, it might not do anything." says Newett, of the Justice Department.[15]Harold C. Palmer, president of the Palmer Chemical and Equipment Company, said he only knew of one case of a tranquilizer dart being used against a criminal. This was in 1961 in a prison in Athens, Georgia. A 220-pound prisoner went berserk and the guard shot him with a tranquilizer dart. Six minutes later, the prisoner lost consciousness.[16]The common method of subduing an inmate for cell extraction is to instead fill their cell withpepper spray.[17]

Criminal use

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Tranquilizer darts are generally not used inkidnappings,rape,ortheftbecause they would easily be detected in a public place such as a bar or restaurant. As "Drugged beverages are so much easier to conceal," explains Dr. Theodore Davantzis.[18]The only person who has been suspected to have used one criminally is Barry Morphew, who is suspected to have chased his wife around the house after shooting her with a tranquilizer dart and then murdering her before the drugs could take effect to prevent her from calling the police.[19]

References

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  1. ^What is chemical capture?Archived2006-04-26 at theWayback Machine
  2. ^Anaesthetics also used in dart gunsArchived2009-10-06 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^Olsen, S.C (19 May 2012)."Immune Responses and Safety after Dart or Booster Vaccination of Bison with Brucella abortus Strain RB51".American Society for Microbiology.19(5): 642–648.doi:10.1128/CVI.00033-12.PMC3346322.PMID22461528.Retrieved22 December2020.
  4. ^| Veterinary Drugs & Dosages TableArchived2022-08-28 at theWayback Machine
  5. ^"NZ Edge Heroes biography of Colin Murdoch".Archived fromthe originalon 2008-05-02.Retrieved2013-03-14.
  6. ^Bush, Mitchell (1992). "Remote Drug Delivery Systems".Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine.23(2): 159–180.JSTOR20095205.
  7. ^С. Успенский.Обездвиживание - перспективный метод отлова животных // журнал "Охота и охотничье хозяйство", № 12, 1969. стр.14-15
  8. ^канд. биол. н. Ю. Герасимов. Обездвиживание животных // журнал «Охота и охотничье хозяйство», № 3, 1975. стр.14-15
  9. ^И. Новиченков, Н. Грошков. Наш способ обездвиживания животных // журнал «Охота и охотничье хозяйство», № 11, 1976. стр.24-25
  10. ^Э. Корепанов. Ижевские ружья: прошлое, настоящее, будущее // журнал «Охота и охотничье хозяйство», № 1, 1987. стр.26-28
  11. ^Chancey, Erin."Remote Injection Systems".VetFolio.Retrieved31 Dec2018.
  12. ^Tranquillizer agentsArchivedApril 26, 2006, at theWayback Machine
  13. ^"Report on the Attorney General's Conference on Less Than Lethal Weapons"(PDF).30 June 1988.Retrieved28 February2022.
  14. ^E. Hollister, Leo (1 July 1958)."Allergic Reactions to Tranquilizing Drugs".Annals of Internal Medicin.Retrieved28 February2022.
  15. ^Cabrera, Luis (30 July 2000)."Shooting Not to Kill: Police Are Turning to Nonlethal Weapons".The Washington Post.Retrieved28 February2022.
  16. ^"TRANQUILIZER GUN STUDIED BY POLICE; Weapon Might Replace Tear Gas to Halt Mad Animals or Violent Criminals TESTS PROVE ACCURATE Sedative in Dart Renders a Man Unconscious--Faster Reaction Is Desired".The New York Times.New York. 1963-11-06.Archivedfrom the original on 2022-10-17.Retrieved2022-10-17.
  17. ^Cole, Dennis (2007)."X-10 OC Extension Device".Tear Gas Resource.Retrieved5 May2023.
  18. ^Davantzis, Theodore."Why don't criminals use tranquilizer darts instead of drugged beverages?".Health Tap.
  19. ^"Evidence in the Suzanne Morphew case".Colorado. 21 January 2022. Archived fromthe originalon 2022-02-01.Retrieved2022-10-23.

Further reading

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