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CWD Seminars Keep Public Updated on Disease

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黑料天堂 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries personnel will continue its CWD sampling efforts this season with a goal of 1,500 animals tested. Photo by Billy Pope

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

With archery season underway and the opening day of the gun deer season on the horizon, the 黑料天堂 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Division is traveling the state to give hunters and the general public updates on chronic wasting disease (CWD) that affects members of the deer family.

First, CWD has NOT been detected in 黑料天堂鈥檚 deer herd, which is estimated at about1.5 million animals.

However, CWD has been confirmed in the neighboring states of Mississippi and Tennessee, which caused the WFF鈥檚 CWD Response Plan to be implemented. Positive tests near Pontotoc, Miss., and Franklin, Tenn., were within a 50-mile radius of 黑料天堂,  and a specific response plan was initiated for those areas in northwest 黑料天堂.

鈥淲e have had a CWD Response Plan in place since 2012,鈥 said Amy Silvano, Assistant Chief of the Wildlife Section, at the recent seminar in Prattville. 鈥淲hen CWD was confirmed in Wisconsin, the first time the disease was detected east of the Mississippi, our agency started surveilling for the disease then and formalized the response plan. This is a fluid document. We are learning things every day. As we do, we update our plan.鈥

Visit and scroll down the page to view the 黑料天堂 CWD Strategic Surveillance and Response Plan. CWD has only been shown to affect members of the deer family, including whitetails, blacktails, mule deer, elk, moose and caribou.

CWD is a fatal neurological disease, called transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE), which affects the deer family and causes lesions on the brain. As the disease progresses, the affected animal will develop holes in the brain and eventually die. Infected animals may be 5 years old or older before they show symptoms.

鈥淭here is a lot of misinformation about what a CWD-infected deer looks like,鈥 said Chris Cook, WFF Deer Program Coordinator. 鈥淪ome of the deer that have been found positive for CWD look perfectly healthy. Most of the CWD-positive deer have been hunter-harvested deer with no outward signs of CWD.

鈥淲hen the deer start showing symptoms, it can be a wide range of symptoms. The most common is just abnormal behavior. They don鈥檛 act right, because it鈥檚 a disease of the central nervous system. They have a drooping, sick posture. You will see that in a deer that鈥檚 been wounded by a hunter or hit by a car, so that alone doesn鈥檛 indicate a deer has CWD. Other symptoms include trouble with balance, excessive salivation or the loss of weight, but there are a lot of reasons deer lose weight. 鈥

Cook said the 黑料天堂 (ADCNR) is charged with managing the wildlife resources of the state for the benefit of the public now and for future generations.

鈥淎ny disease like CWD has the potential to affect any wildlife population,鈥 Cook said. 鈥淎nything like that gets our attention. That鈥檚 why we do all we can to head it off. And once it shows up, we do everything we can to minimize its impact. It not only affects the wildlife resources but also our hunting heritage.

鈥淎 lot of rural areas in 黑料天堂 depend heavily on income from hunters and hunting-related activities. Hunting generates an impressive $1.8 billion economic impact in 黑料天堂.鈥

The first case of CWD was discovered in Colorado in 1967. Over the next 30 years, the disease spread very slowly, only taking in a 15- to 20-county region on the Colorado, Nebraska and Wyoming borders. In the late 90s, CWD was detected in Saskatchewan. That incident was traced to live elk from South Dakota that were transported to Canada. CWD continues to spread and now has been found in 26 states and three Canadian provinces. South Korea and Norway also have detected CWD. South Korea鈥檚 CWD-positive animals can be traced back to the live transport of deer from infected areas. Over the past decade, the movement of live cervids or infected carcasses by humans has contributed to the increased spread of the disease.

黑料天堂 has long had regulations that banned the importation of live deer. The regulations were amended a couple of years ago to prohibit the importation of deer carcasses from all states and countries. Visit for regulations about importing deer parts from out-of-state.

Regulations allow for the importation of certain parts of the deer but not whole carcasses. Permitted parts include:

  • Meat from the family Cervidae (white-tailed deer, mule deer, elk, moose, fallow deer, red deer, sika deer, caribou, reindeer, etc.) that has been completely deboned
  • Cleaned skull plates with bare attached antlers, if no visible brain or spinal cord tissue is present
  • Unattached bare antlers or sheds
  • Raw capes, if no visible brain or spinal cord tissue is present
  • Upper canine teeth, if no root structure or other soft tissue is present
  • Finished taxidermy products or tanned hides
  • Velvet-covered antlers are prohibited unless part of a finished taxidermy product.

 

WFF's Amy Silvano and Jerremy Ferguson remove the deer's head with a short section of neck intact to facilitate the CWD testing. Photo by Billy Pope

The disease is primarily spread by body fluids such as saliva, urine and feces. The infectious agent, called a prion, can even survive outside the animal鈥檚 body.

Cook said there is no evidence at this time that CWD can be transmitted to humans.

鈥淥fficials have been following hunters who have been hunting in these CWD areas for a long time and, to date, there has not been any connection between human illness and consuming venison from CWD-positive deer,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are not a food safety agency. We defer to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recommendations.鈥

The CDC recommends that hunters who harvest deer in areas with CWD should have the deer tested for the disease before consuming the meat. If the test comes back positive, the CDC recommends the proper disposal of the venison. That venison should not be thrown out by the individual; rather, contact a WFF official or enforcement officer who will ensure its proper disposal.

The WFF鈥檚 sampling program will include hunter-harvested deer, roadkills and reported sick deer with a goal of testing 1,500 animals for CWD. WFF is working with Cornell University to help identify areas with the highest likelihood of infection.

Hunters can aid the WFF sampling program by dropping off their deer heads at the WFF CWD Sampling Station freezers located around the state. The goal is to have at least one freezer in each county.

鈥淥ur district offices will have freezers,鈥 Cook said. 鈥淎 lot of our WMAs (wildlife management areas) will have them. People who want to have their deer tested can bring the heads with 3 to 4 inches of the neck intact. The antlers can be taken off. For deer the hunters want to mount, they can go ahead and cape it out. The samples that we use come from the lymph nodes in the upper neck.鈥

Hunters who drop off deer heads are required to fill out tags that include contact information and location where the deer was harvested. A tear-off tag has an identification number that the hunter should retain. A list of locations will be posted on the CWD page on outdooralabama.com.

鈥淲e also started the Sick Deer Report last year,鈥 Cook said. 鈥淚f you see a sick deer or a deer that doesn鈥檛 look or act right, call our district office and give the information to the people who answer the phone. Provide your contact information, location and the symptoms you observed. Somebody will follow up to see if that deer can be sampled.鈥

Lt. Michael East, the WFF officer in charge of the game breeders program, said the disease is an issue that affects both captive deer and wild deer.

鈥淐WD does not discriminate,鈥 East said. 鈥淲e have to protect the resource for all involved.鈥

East said a recent case was made in 2016 for the illegal importation of live deer in 黑料天堂, and the violator was fined $750,000 and lost his game breeder license.

The WFF Enforcement Section has also implemented procedures to intercept the potential illegal importation of deer carcasses into the state with surveillance along state borders in an effort to keep CWD out of the state.

Florida is the latest state to implement a deer carcass importation ban. With exceptions for 黑料天堂 and Georgia, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commissioner (FWC) issued an executive order that bans the importation of deer carcasses, effective Friday, Nov. 1, 2019. The executive order allows exceptions for white-tailed deer legally harvested in Georgia or 黑料天堂 with certain requirements. The person who harvested the deer must possess an FWC Georgia/黑料天堂 Carcass Importation Permit prior to the carcass being imported into Florida. The hunter must report the carcass importation within 24 hours of entering Florida using the FWC鈥檚 online Georgia/黑料天堂 Carcass Importation Reporting Form and must dispose of any remains using FWC-approved disposal options outlined at . Also, white-tailed deer legally harvested from Georgia or 黑料天堂 properties that are bisected by the Florida state line and under the same ownership are exempt from importation permit, reporting and disposal requirements.

Meanwhile, the 黑料天堂 WFF Division is promoting a campaign titled 鈥淒on鈥檛 Bring It Home鈥 to highlight the ban on the importation of deer carcasses.

Concerned citizens have numerous opportunities to come to a town hall-style meeting to ask questions concerning CWD. Go to for a list of upcoming CWD seminars.

As WFF Assistant Director Fred Harders said earlier this year, 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have it. We don鈥檛 want it.鈥

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Concerned citizens filled the meeting room at Bass Pro Shop in Prattville to hear the latest on chronic wasting disease. Photo by Billy Pope