Chronic wasting disease Houston county

  • pass0047
    Pool4
    Posts: 494
    #1980004

    Chronic wasting disease confirmed in Houston County farmed deer herd

    St. Paul, Minn. – Chronic wasting disease (CWD) has been confirmed at a Houston County white-tailed deer farm. A 2 ½-year-old white-tailed doe tested positive for CWD after it died; all farmed cervids that die or are slaughtered must be tested for CWD. The herd has been quarantined and the herd owner is cooperating with the Board of Animal Health’s (Board’s) CWD investigation, which includes evaluating herd records and animal movements for the past five years.

    “We’re compiling the last five years of the herd history and movements as required by federal program standards, and we’re working with the USDA to appraise and request federal indemnity for this herd,” said Board Assistant Director, Dr. Linda Glaser. “There are 38 adults and 11 fawns in the herd and we plan to work with the producer to develop a depopulation and testing plan.”

    The farm is located within the Board’s designated CWD endemic area* in southeastern Minnesota and the herd enclosure was double-fenced in 2017; before the Board established the endemic area in Houston County in late 2018. In the last five years, this herd has only imported animals from two Minnesota herds and did import the CWD positive animal in 2019 from a Winona County herd which has also been quarantined. The herd has only exported animals to one location in Wisconsin.

    The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is currently testing hunter harvested wild deer in Houston County as part of the planned CWD surveillance for the fall deer hunting seasons. This surveillance is a critical part of the state’s efforts to reduce the impact of CWD on the state’s wild deer population.

    “We typically heighten our efforts to collect samples from wild deer in areas that surround CWD-infected cervid farms,” said Dr. Michelle Carstensen, Wildlife Health Program supervisor. “Even though sampling is voluntary this year, the more hunters submit samples, the better we can understand how CWD is spreading in the area. This new detection is within our CWD management zone and intensifies our need for Houston County deer hunters to submit samples.” 

    Last fall, three deer tested positive for CWD out of approximately 2,260 deer that were tested within 10 miles of this newly detected CWD-positive farm. Hunters should check the DNR’s CWD webpage for sampling station availability. Sampling result totals from the DNR are available on the CWD sampling page.

    CWD is a disease of the deer and elk family caused by prions, which can damage brain and nerve tissue. The disease is most likely transmitted when infected deer and elk shed prions in saliva, feces, urine, and other fluids or tissues. CWD is not known to naturally occur in other animals. The disease is fatal in deer and elk, and there are no known treatments or vaccines. Consuming meat from CWD infected animals is not advised.

    * The Board establishes the endemic area boundary 15 miles around all confirmed cases of CWD in the wild. The designation of this area impacts farmed Cervidae herds found within the area. Farmed Cervidae in these herds are restricted from moving to other areas of the state until the producer can demonstrate the herd is maintained in such a way to prevent commingling of farmed and wild Cervidae.

    Snap
    Posts: 264
    #1980024

    20 years of impending CWD doom has taught me not to fear CWD, but to fear the DNR’s response…

    Bassn Dan
    Posts: 979
    #1980057

    20 years of impending CWD doom has taught me not to fear CWD, but to fear the DNR’s response…

    The CORRECT response would be to ban game farms….

    gim
    Plymouth, MN
    Posts: 17834
    #1980064

    The CORRECT response would be to ban game farms…

    Or legislate meaningful rules and then enforce them…

    JEREMY
    BP
    Posts: 3971
    #1980137

    No. The correct response is to shoot every deer within a 30 mile radius and test them all and find nothing.

    KPE
    River Falls, WI
    Posts: 1717
    #1980156

    The CORRECT response would be to ban game farms….

    This guy actually gets it

    joneser
    Inactive
    Posts: 172
    #1980256

    <div class=”d4p-bbt-quote-title”>Bassn Dan wrote:</div>
    The CORRECT response would be to ban game farms….

    This guy actually gets it

    There’s a much better solution that doesn’t infringe on landowner rights and the ability of some to make a living.

    Require all gamefarms to be double high-fenced with ten feet minimum required between the two fences.

    That’d mitigate the spread of any disease between farmed and wild deer.

    grubson
    Harris, Somewhere in VNP
    Posts: 1640
    #1980261

    The deer farmers have consistently been the smoking gun in this cwd debacle since it began. They continue to move deer from farm to farm and that is what causes the spread of cwd. In my opinion, they’ve shown how they run their businesses and no new regulations are going to change what they do.
    Im for banning all deer farms. Why does a select few people have the right to threaten all of our deer hunting opportunities? I actually don’t see a need to farm ANY wild animal species period.

    Snap
    Posts: 264
    #1980371

    The CORRECT response would be to ban game farms….

    I’m all for bans as long as the people calling for bans are the ones to pick up their guns, drive out to the guys house and forces him to shut down his business in front of his wife and children. The ban-ers also get to pay for his jail cell, his hospital bill, or his funeral if he refuses.

    Requiring the banners to pay the guy full restitution on his investment and a few years of salary to get him back on his feet would be good too!

    WAAAAAAAY too easy to be controlling, violent thugs in a democracy but not pay any actual cost for doing so.

    Tom Sawvell
    Inactive
    Posts: 9559
    #1980400

    The forced 4 point rule flooded the deer herd with too many bucks. Bucks are the primary carries in wild deer. Before too many people start pointing fingers at deer farms, they need to seriously look at their support of that bogus rule. The four point rule has done more harm to Minnesota’s SE deer herd than any one other single factor.

    Jim in Wisconsin
    Posts: 64
    #1980416

    It’s time to develop a vaccine to protect our deer herd. It worked for polio, small pox, measles, etc. Put an end to this “shoulda, coulda talk.

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