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What is CWD?
CWD is a neurological (brain and nervous system) disease found in
deer and elk. The disease belongs to a
family of diseases known as transmissible spongiform
encephalopathies (TSE) or prion diseases. The
disease attacks the brains of infected deer and elk and produces
small lesions that result in death. While
CWD is similar to mad cow disease in cattle and scrapie in sheep,
there is no known relationship between
CWD and any other TSE of animals or people. For more information on
CWD please visit this link:
(www.michigan.gov/chronicwastingdisease).
Where has CWD been found?
The disease also has been diagnosed in commercial game farms in
Colorado, Nebraska, Minnesota, South
Dakota, Montana, Oklahoma, Kansas, Wisconsin, New York, Saskatchewan
and Alberta, Canada and in an elk herd in
Korea. In Michigan, the disease was confirmed on 8/25/2008 in a Kent
County deer breeding facility.
The disease was long thought to be limited in the wild to a
relatively small endemic area in northeastern
Colorado, southeastern Wyoming and southwestern Nebraska, but
it has recently been found in new areas
of these states, as well as in wild deer and elk in western South
Dakota, and wild deer in northern Illinois,
south-central New Mexico, northeastern and central Utah,
south-central and south-eastern Wisconsin,
central New York, north-east West Virginia, Kansas and west and
south-central Saskatchewan. Also, a CWD
positive moose has recently been discovered in the endemic area of
Colorado.
Where was the CWD deer in Michigan?
The deer was in a deer breeding facility in Kent County. The owner
sent the culled deer to MDA for required
testing. The deer was a three-year-old white-tailed doe.
Now that CWD has been found in Michigan, what
is the DNR and Michigan Department of Agriculture doing?
The DNR and the Michigan Department of Agriculture (MDA) are
following the steps outlined in the
Michigan Surveillance and Response Plan for Chronic Wasting Disease,
which was developed in 2002 to address
this nationally emerging disease. Since the development of the plan,
DNR and MDA have had a surveillance
program in place to detect CWD in captive or wild cervids. In August
2008, CWD was discovered on a privately
owned cervid facility in Michigan. Confirmation of CWD in Michigan
began the
implementation of the response aspect of the plan.
As outlined in the plan, the following steps have or will occur:
• The state has quarantined all POC facilities, prohibiting the
movement of all -- dead or alive --
privately-owned deer, elk or moose.
• The DNR is working with landowners to collect deer from the
vicinity of the facility to assess whether
CWD is present in free-ranging deer.
• A ban has been enacted to prevent all feeding and baiting of deer
and elk in the Lower Peninsula in an
effort to reduce the possible spread of CWD.
• Possession of any wild free-ranging deer is now illegal. Taking an
unhealthy deer from the environment and
attempting to rehabilitate it has the potential to increase the
spread of CWD.
• A CWD surveillance zone has been established for the nine
townships surrounding the privately owned
facility.
• For the 2008 deer hunting season, all deer harvested within the
CWD surveillance zone must be taken to one
of the DNR deer check stations within the CWD surveillance zone.
• All deer harvested in this zone must be tested for CWD.
• For deer harvested in this CWD surveillance zone, only boned meat,
cape and clean skull plates with antlers
may be removed from this nine township area.
• DNR employees will collect the head of all deer as they are
brought in.
Where is the CWD Surveillance Zone?
The new CWD surveillance zone includes the townships of Tyrone,
Solon, Nelson, Sparta, Algoma, Courtland,
Alpine, Plainfield, and Cannon, which are all located in Kent
County.
Does CWD pose a health risk to humans?
CWD has never been shown to cause illness in humans. For more than
two decades CWD has been present in wild
populations of mule deer and elk in Colorado. In this time there has
been no known occurrence of a human
contracting any disease from eating CWD infected meat. However,
public health officials recommend that
people not consume meat from deer that test CWD-positive. Some
simple precautions should be taken when
field dressing deer in the CWD Surveillance Zone:
• Wear rubber gloves when field dressing your deer.
• Bone out the meat from your deer.
• Minimize the handling of brain and spinal tissues.
• Wash hands and instruments thoroughly after field dressing is
completed.
• Avoid consuming brain, spinal cord, eyes, spleen, tonsils and
lymph nodes of harvested animals. (Normal
field dressing coupled with boning out of a carcass will essentially
remove all of these parts.)
• Request that your animal is processed individually, without meat
from other animals being added to meat
from your animal.
Is the meat safe to eat?
While the agent that produces chronic wasting disease in deer and
elk has not been positively identified,
there is strong evidence to suggest that abnormally shaped proteins,
called prions are responsible.
Research completed to date indicate that the prions accumulate in
certain parts of infected animals-the
brain, eyes, spinal cord, lymph nodes, tonsils, and spleen. Based on
these findings, hunters are recommended to
not eat meat from animals known to be infected with CWD. Hunters in
CWD areas are also advised to bone out
their meat and to not consume those parts where prions likely
accumulate.
How can CWD be treated and controlled in
wildlife?
There is no treatment for CWD; it is fatal in all cases to the
members of the deer family that it infects.
CWD transmission can be controlled by limiting contact
between infected and non-infected animals.
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Department of
Agriculture are working to maintain the
integrity of Michigan’s white-tailed deer and elk herd.
Surveillance, cervid importation restrictions,
and required CWD testing of suspect animals continue to be the key
to CWD control.
Why should people outside of the CWD
surveillance zones care about the disease?
Chronic wasting disease is a statewide issue. A healthy white-tailed
deer population in Michigan is important
for the following reasons:
• Chronic wasting disease can spread through the deer herd.
• All deer infected with CWD die from the disease.
• White-tailed deer are native to Michigan and it is important to
preserve our native wildlife.
• Any regional threat to a healthy deer population is a statewide
concern.
• A healthy deer herd is important for hunting traditions. Michigan
has more than 725,000 deer hunters who
have harvested an average of 450,000 deer annually during the past
decade. Deer hunting contributes more than
10 million days of recreation every year.
• Deer hunting annually generates more than $500 million dollars
impact to the state’s economy. A healthy
deer herd is critical to the state's economy.
• Without appropriate management within the current CWD surveillance
zone, the disease may spread to other
areas of the state.
How is CWD transmitted?
It is not fully understood how CWD is transmitted between deer. Data
to date suggest that it may be transmitted
both directly through animal to animal contact as well as indirectly
through a contaminated environment. A
recent study from Colorado State University, published in the
journal Science, proved that CWD prions
exist in the saliva of infected deer. Additionally, a recent study
from the University of Wisconsin, Madison,
suggests that the CWD prion can remain infectious for several years
in certain types of soil.
Can CWD be transmitted to livestock?
To date, there has been no documented occurrence of livestock
contracting CWD from free-ranging deer or
elk. Further, in long-term studies where cattle have been housed in
pens with CWD-infected deer and elk,
transmission has not occurred. In studies where cattle had
CWD-positive material injected directly
into their brain, many of the cattle developed CWD. These
experiments show that CWD can be
transmitted to cattle, but through a very unlikely and extreme route
of exposure. In similar experiments where
cattle were fed brain material from CWD-infected deer and elk all
animals have remained healthy. Since it is
hypothesized that animals are infected with CWD by the oral route,
this set of experiments may simulate a
more natural route of exposure.
How can you tell if a deer has CWD?
Infected animals may not show any symptoms of the disease for a long
period of time, even years. In the later
stages of the disease, however, infected animals begin to lose
bodily functions and display abnormal
behavior such as staggering or standing with very poor posture.
Animals may have an exaggerated wide
posture, or may carry the head and ears lowered. Infected animals
become very emaciated (thus wasting
disease) and will appear in very poor body condition. Infected
animals will also often stand near water
and will consume large amounts of water. Drooling or excessive
salivation may be apparent. Note that
these symptoms may also be characteristic of diseases other than
CWD.
What should I do if I see a deer that shows CWD
symptoms?
You should accurately document the location of the animal and
immediately and call the Rap Line (1-800-
292-7800). Do not attempt to contact, disturb, kill, or remove the
animal.
Where can I get more information on CWD?
For more information about how Michigan is working to prevent CWD
from infecting Michigan's wild cervid
populations and control CWD in deer and elk facilities, see the
Emerging Diseases Web site and in
particular the Michigan Surveillance and Response Plan for CWD of
Free-ranging and Privately Owned/Captive
Cervids Contingency Plan, which is located at (www.michigan.gov/chronicwastingdisease).
More information about Chronic
Wasting Disease:
http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,1607,7-153--198865--,00.html
Michigan DNR description of the first case of CWD
found at a Kent County Deer Breeding Facility.
http://www.cwd-info.org/
A site dedicated to spreading the word and
educating the public about this potentially devastating disease.
http://www.welcometohunting.com/video/CWD/cable/cwd.html
This site has a list of videos related to
avoiding CWD and how to dress your animal and more. Lots of good
information here!
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