I have to disagree with you here. From what I've seen of long range pokes on animals (anything 400 yards plus) there is a higher percentage of bang flops. Even on marginal hits.
I've attributed this to animals that are completely unaware of humans in the area, or not making the connection with danger.
My thought being that animals don't associate a far off gunshot with the pain they experience instants before.
I've definitely seen fringe hits on animals before, where if they didn't identify where the shot came from they didn't run, and a second shot tipped them on their noses.
That would be easy to edit in as a first shot bang flop....
A bang-flop is where the animal is hit and immediately falls as a result of incapacitation... An animal shot through the lungs at 1000 yards that is not frightened and continues to feed for a minute before falling over is NOT a bang-flop... Nor is an animal that requires a second shot while it is "still" on its feet...
Further, there are many issues with long range shooting that have nothing to do with marksmanship... Many fatally hit animals run-off, as do marginally hit animals... They often don't appear to be wounded in flight... I wonder how many of those long range shooter's will cross the canyon and ford the river to get to the location of the animal to do a proper follow-up... Or who at 800-1000 yards can even properly and accurately landmark where the animal was standing to do a proper search??? Further, marksmanship is the minor issue, wind slightly more, bigger yet is target animal movement and that cannot be controlled or always predicted... At that range there is sufficient time for quarry movement to cause a poor hit... JMO.
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