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Article on CWD in Idaho

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Fatal deer and elk illness: Are we ready?
Chronic wasting disease could devastate Idaho herds
The Idaho Statesman
December 7, 2003

Chronic wasting disease has never been found in Idaho, but biologists and
hunters are increasingly concerned because the fatal disease of deer and elk is
spreading erratically, and other states have killed thousands of animals in
attempts to control it.
Idaho officials are prepared to kill deer and elk here if the disease is ever
found. It could disrupt hunting seasons and devastate the game ranch and hunting
industry.
Some hunters say Idaho is not doing enough to prevent CWD from crossing its
borders. Tom Judge, president of Idaho State Bowhunters, said the biggest
concern he hears from his fellow hunters is that the disease will come to Idaho
through game farms.
"I don´t think most people are concerned about a natural migration of the
disease into Idaho. It´s not something that would probably come into Idaho on
its own," said Tom Judge of Boise, who is president of Idaho State Bowhunters.
Others brace for the disease´s debut. "I think we will be extremely fortunate if
it doesn´t show up here eventually," said Idaho Department of Fish and Game
Director Steve Huffaker.
What is chronic wasting disease?
Chronic wasting disease belongs to a family of diseases known as transmissible
spongiform encephalopathy.
There is no cure or vaccination for the fatal brain disease, and scientists
don´t know how it´s spread. It attacks the animals´ brains and causes weight
loss, excessive drooling, shaking and stumbling.
It affects only deer and elk and is not transmitted to humans, cows, horses,
sheep or other livestock.
It is similar to other TSE diseases, such as mad cow disease in cattle and
scrapie in sheep. There also is a rare form of the disease called
Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease that affects humans.
"I think what has really pushed the alarm button is these TSEs are related to
mad cow disease," Huffaker said.
Will it come to Idaho?
CWD has been found in 12 states and two Canadian provinces, including three
states that border Idaho.
The disease was first discovered at a research station in Colorado near the
Wyoming border, and biologists say it could slowly be spreading from there, but
it also has leapfrogged into other areas.
Biologists are puzzled and troubled by CWD because no one has scientifically
proven how animals contract the disease, nor has it been eradicated in the wild.
F&G wildlife veterinarian Phil Mamer said the disease appears to be gradually
moving west.
"It´s spreading and being detected more, and it´s a reasonable assumption we
will find it in Idaho" Mamer said.
"When, I have no idea. Hopefully by then we will have a much better idea of how
to eliminate the disease."
Wyoming and Utah both have CWD in their wild herds, and Montana reported one
case on a game ranch.
CWD also has leaped across the Mississippi into Wisconsin´s deer herds, and it
was found in southern New Mexico in wild deer at the White Sands Missile Range,
hundreds of miles from any other known cases.
Most Western states, including Idaho, have increased surveillance for the
disease and have tested tens of thousands of animals killed by hunters and
domestic deer and elk killed at slaughterhouses.
"Once a disease occurs, people start looking for it," Mamer said. "People say
it´s spreading rapidly, but how do we know if it has never been tested before?"
What’s being done to control CWD
In the fall of 2001, Mamer, then a Caldwell veterinarian, helped kill 37
domestic elk. Days earlier, the elk had been a tourist attraction at a bed and
breakfast in Salmon.
The herd had been exposed before it came to Idaho to an elk that died from CWD.
Because there is no live test for the disease, the animals had to be killed and
tested.
All tested negative. But the elk and their owners, Ron and Gloria Stigall of
Salmon, became CWD´s first victims in Idaho.
"We were killing this guy´s life savings and his family pets," Mamer said.
The Idaho F&G has been monitoring for the disease since 1997. Surveillance
methods have included testing animals killed by vehicles and those that appear
sick.
Last year, F&G tested 680 animals killed by hunters, and the agency plans to
test 1,700 more this year. None have tested positive.
F&G, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Idaho Department of Agriculture
also have taken steps to stop the disease from coming into the state.
In 2001, F&G banned the importation of captive mule deer and white-tailed deer
into Idaho.
That ban does not apply to domestic elk, which are regulated by the Idaho
Department of Agriculture. Idaho classifies captive elk as livestock, which puts
them under rules similar to those that regulate cattle, sheep and horses.
Since 2000, the Idaho Department of Agriculture has required that all domestic
elk come from herds that are CWD-free. Permits are required to buy, sell or
transport elk into the state. Any captive elk in Idaho that are slaughtered, are
shot or die of other causes must be tested for the disease under state rules.
Officials from F&G and from the Department of Agriculture say neither has enough
personnel to oversee the actions of every game ranch operator.
"That´s something we at state government have struggled with since time began,"
Department of Agriculture state veterinarian Clarence Siroky said.
The state has five inspectors who are responsible for all livestock operations,
including elk farms. For some idea of what the five inspectors are responsible
for, there were 11,500 cattle operations in the state in 2002, the latest year
for which figures are available. That figure doesn´t include the number of sheep
and hog operations.
There are at least 90 game ranches in the state, but because the state doesn´t
require a license to open one, officials aren´t sure just how many there are.
"This whole thing is about minimizing risk," the F&G director, Huffaker, said.
"It´s such an onerous task trying to prevent any possibility that we would have
to seal up the whole state, and that´s not realistic."
In the United States and Canada, thousands of domestic deer and elk have been
killed as officials tried to control the spread of CWD.
Colorado, Wisconsin, Nebraska and South Dakota have allowed thousands of wild
deer and elk to be shot during liberalized hunting seasons to control the spread
of the disease. In some cases they used government sharpshooters to kill herds.
"The problem is in the wild," Mamer said. "What are you going to do, take some
super disinfectant and spray the forest?"
Is Idaho doing enough?
Tom Judge has two concerns about the state´s management of game farms: The state
doesn´t do enough to keep wild elk and domestic elk separated, and an elk ranch
could be started in an area where wild elk could be exposed to domestic animals
because there are no restrictions on where an elk ranch can be placed.
Judge also said that because CWD affects only deer and elk, the state isn´t as
concerned as it would be if the disease affected livestock. He said the state
favors the agricultural industry over wildlife.
"I would think you would see a much stronger reaction from Idaho Department of
Agriculture if this was mad cow disease rather than CWD," Judge said.
Veterinarian Siroky disagrees. He said Idaho´s regulations, as well as those in
other states, have put adequate controls in place.
"I don´t know of any states out there that don´t have fairly aggressive CWD
regulations," he said. "Screws are tightened down pretty hard on this industry
right now."
According to the National Wildlife Federation, 31 states have put temporary or
permanent bans on the importation of captive deer and elk, including Washington,
Oregon, Nevada and Wyoming. Utah does not allow game ranches, and Montana is in
the process of phasing them out after a voter initiative halted any new game
farms from starting.
New Mexico recently lifted its ban on importing captive deer and elk but does
not allow them to be imported from anywhere CWD has been found within the
previous five years.
Idaho allows importation of captive elk and does not license game farms.
But the state and federal departments of Agriculture regulate the movement of
elk within the state and from other states.
Other states also regulate the importation of game animals killed by hunters.
Oregon bans import of animals killed in states that have CWD, and other states,
such as Washington and Montana, recommend that their hunters bring back only
boneless meat and antlers removed from the skull.
Idaho does not restrict the importation of legally harvested deer and elk from
other states.
No one knows how CWD is spread
CWD is most likely transmitted through urine, feces, saliva and nasal mucus, but
no one knows for sure, Mamer said.
Another possible mode of transmission is environmental contamination, where the
disease gets into the soil or vegetation; CWD recurs in areas where animals have
been removed and then later are returned.
Game ranches take a lot of the blame for the spread of the disease.
"That´s where it always shows up first in other states," said James England,
veterinarian at the University of Idaho´s Caine Veterinary Center in Caldwell.
"Almost all the cases have been associated with captive herds."
But Siroky said recent media attention to CWD and the reaction from hunters and
wildlife advocates has created an emotional response against game farms that is
not warranted.
"People are not looking at it from a science-based point of view," Siroky said.
"This is a much more difficult issue than, ´Let´s blame it on the game farms.´
CWD existed (in wild animals) in Wyoming and Colorado for years. Where was the
public outcry then?"
Opponents of game farms also have played the CWD card in an effort to shut down
the industry, he said.
"They feel they can use tuberculosis, brucellosis and CWD to justify their
belief that game farms philosophically should not be allowed," Siroky said.
"Don´t use a disease to justify that kind of ideology."
Deer showing symptoms of CWD were first reported in 1967 at a Colorado wildlife
research facility but the symptoms were not identified as a disease until 1977.
Researchers at the Colorado facility tried to eradicate the disease by plowing,
burning and disinfecting the soil where animals were kept.
At a Wyoming facility, deer and elk were removed for more than a year.
In both cases, CWD recurred after deer and elk were returned to the research
facilities.
"Once you´ve got it, you´re probably never going to get rid of it," Huffaker
said. "You´ve just got to live with it."
Being exposed to the disease does not mean an animal will contract it, but
animals that have been exposed are usually killed and tested. Even a negative
test means a dead animal, and in some cases, extermination of entire herds.
In 2001, the 37 captive elk from Salmon were killed because, before coming to
Idaho, the herd was exposed to another captive elk that had tested positive for
CWD.
The incident sent shock waves through the elk ranching and hunting community
because captive elk and wild elk will occasionally have nose-to-nose contact
through a fence, Mamer said.
Had the domestic elk been infected, they could have passed the disease to their
wild counterparts.
"Idaho pretty much dodged a bullet," Mamer said.
But F&G officials are concerned we won´t dodge the next one. They are closely
watching "shooter bull" operations in the state, in which people pay to shoot
elk in penned enclosures up to thousands of acres in size and often in prime elk
habitat. That increases the potential for interactions between wild and domestic
elk, Mamer said.
Recently, a wild bull elk was killed in the Magic Valley because it kept
returning to a pen where domestic elk were held. Although the elk never got
inside, F&G officials said they killed it because of the possibility that
diseases could be passed between the domestic elk and the wild one.
Those encounters could increase as more shooter bull operations start. As game
ranches, they don´t have to be licensed by the Department of Agriculture.
What is Idaho’s plan?
The state has two plans, one for domestic and one for wild animals.
In domestic populations in which animals test positive for CWD, the herd could
be quarantined, killed or incinerated, according to Department of Agriculture
rules.
If CWD shows up in wild deer and elk, F&G would kill and test at least 50
animals within a 5-mile radius. If no more tested positive, F&G would continue
to test animals killed during regular hunting seasons.
If more animals tested positive, deer and elk herds would be reduced by a
minimum of 25 to 50 percent within a 5-mile radius.
"If required, eradication of all potentially affected free-ranging deer and elk
within 1 mile of known affected animals will be considered within reasonable
constraints of cost, manpower and personnel safety," F&G´s action plan states.
"I don´t know what the alternative is," Huffaker said. "As time goes on and we
learn more about this thing, maybe there will be better ways to deal with it."
 
Just wait, some elk farmer in Idaho will want to help find the cure and bring some infected animals here......
rolleyes.gif
rolleyes.gif
rolleyes.gif
Kinda like th CO incident.
mad.gif
 
The Cliff Notes version:

<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>In 2001, F&G banned the importation of captive mule deer and white-tailed deer
into Idaho.
That ban does not apply to domestic elk, which are regulated by the Idaho
Department of Agriculture. Idaho classifies captive elk as livestock, which puts
them under rules similar to those that regulate cattle, sheep and horses.
Since 2000, the Idaho Department of Agriculture has required that all domestic
elk come from herds that are CWD-free. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Interesting. There's no live test for CWD, but they require elk being imported to come from CWD-free herds. Exactly how do they know these herds are CWD-free?
confused.gif


<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR> There are at least 90 game ranches in the state, but because the state doesn´t
require a license to open one, officials aren´t sure just how many there are.
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Boy, theres's a tight restriction if I've ever seen one.
rolleyes.gif


<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Tom Judge has two concerns about the state´s management of game farms: The state
doesn´t do enough to keep wild elk and domestic elk separated, and an elk ranch
could be started in an area where wild elk could be exposed to domestic animals
because there are no restrictions on where an elk ranch can be placed.
Judge also said that because CWD affects only deer and elk, the state isn´t as
concerned as it would be if the disease affected livestock. He said the state
favors the agricultural industry over wildlife.
"I would think you would see a much stronger reaction from Idaho Department of
Agriculture if this was mad cow disease rather than CWD," Judge said.
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
eek.gif
You mean the state is more concerned with survival of the agriculture industry over survival of it's wildlife?

<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Game ranches take a lot of the blame for the spread of the disease.
"That´s where it always shows up first in other states," said James England,
veterinarian at the University of Idaho´s Caine Veterinary Center in Caldwell.
"Almost all the cases have been associated with captive herds."
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>That's why the argument "It's existed in the wild for 40 years" doesn't hold water. Sure, it existed before game farms. But game farms have become an agent of spread to areas that otherwise may not have seen CWD in hundreds of years through natural spread. Think of the CWD research that could have been done in that time. CWD is just pushing down on the accelerator of that car that's heading for a brick wall.

<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>In 2001, the 37 captive elk from Salmon were killed because, before coming to
Idaho, the herd was exposed to another captive elk that had tested positive for
CWD.
The incident sent shock waves through the elk ranching and hunting community
because captive elk and wild elk will occasionally have nose-to-nose contact
through a fence, Mamer said.
Had the domestic elk been infected, they could have passed the disease to their
wild counterparts.
"Idaho pretty much dodged a bullet," Mamer said.
But F&G officials are concerned we won´t dodge the next one. They are closely
watching "shooter bull" operations in the state, in which people pay to shoot
elk in penned enclosures up to thousands of acres in size and often in prime elk
habitat. That increases the potential for interactions between wild and domestic
elk, Mamer said.
Recently, a wild bull elk was killed in the Magic Valley because it kept
returning to a pen where domestic elk were held. Although the elk never got
inside, F&G officials said they killed it because of the possibility that
diseases could be passed between the domestic elk and the wild one.
Those encounters could increase as more shooter bull operations start. As game
ranches, they don´t have to be licensed by the Department of Agriculture.
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>It's just a matter of time...

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