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Author Topic: MA: CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE UNDETECTED IN BAY STATE DEER  (Read 228 times)
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« on: August 18, 2010, 02:51:23 PM »

Based on data gathered during the 2009 deer hunting season, no evidence of chronic wasting disease (CWD) was detected in Massachusetts deer or moose. The Division of Fisheries and Wildlife (DFW) recently received results from a federally certified veterinary diagnostic laboratory that indicate that all the brain and lymph node samples taken from cervids (members of the deer family) during last fall's hunting season tested negative for the disease. In late 2009 and early 2010, Division biologists collected 487 samples from hunter-harvested, vehicle-killed, targeted, and clinical suspect deer from across the state for CWD monitoring and testing. This was the eighth year of sampling in Massachusetts as part of a nationwide CWD monitoring and surveillance program. Five moose samples from vehicle-kills were submitted as part of the monitoring and surveillance program for 2009.

Chronic wasting disease is a fatal neurological disorder known to affect white-tailed deer, mule deer, elk, and moose. The World Health Organization has concluded that there is no evidence that people can become infected with CWD. CWD was first identified in the late 1960's in Colorado and remained located in Colorado, Wyoming and Nebraska for over two decades. In the past decade, CWD has been found in parts of the Midwest, several Canadian provinces and most recently in the eastern states of New York, Virginia, and West Virginia.

As stewards for wildlife in the state, DFW has implemented strict regulations to prevent the disease from entering the Bay State and affecting the health of both wild and captive deer populations. It is unlawful to import all species of live deer, including European red deer, sika deer, fallow deer and reindeer, all species commonly raised commercially. It is also illegal for anyone to import process or possess whole carcasses or parts of deer or elk (from wild or captive deer herds) from states and Canadian provinces where CWD has been detected. The only exceptions to the regulation are meat that is deboned, cleaned skull caps, cleaned hides and finished taxidermy mounts. By restricting importation to these specific deer parts, the importation of neurological tissue --which is where the disease-causing prions are located -- is prevented, while sportsmen and sportswomen hunting in states with CWD can still safely use the deer they harvest. For more information on CWD, check the Division’s website at:  www.mass.gov/dfwele/dfw/wildlife/diseases/cwd_info.htm.

 

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