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June 22, 2006
Testing of more than 600 brain and lymph node tissue samples from
white-tailed deer in all three counties of Delaware showed no evidence of
chronic wasting disease (CWD), the Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife
announced today. This brings the total number of Delaware deer tested since
2003 to more than 1,900.
During the October muzzleloader and November shotgun deer seasons last
fall, 620 tissue samples – at least 200 from each county - were collected
from deer harvested by hunters at meat processors across the state. The
samples were submitted to the University of Pennsylvania’s School of
Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center for testing. Final test results
just received showed all the samples to be negative for the disease.
“Six hundred samples gave us a 99 percent probability of detecting the
disease if it existed in one percent or more of the deer population. The
only way to be certain that every deer in Delaware is free of CWD would be
to test every deer, and that would not be practical. While this doesn’t
provide 100 percent assurance of no disease, we are encouraged by these
results,” said Joe Rogerson, the Division’s Game Mammal Biologist.
CWD is a neurological condition found in deer and elk in which an abnormal
protein material called a prion invades and gradually destroys the animal’s
brain. It is thought to be 100 percent fatal and believed to be transmitted
from close contact with infected deer. The disease wasn’t known until the
1960s. In the 1970s, CWD was identified as a transmittable neurological
disease. Extensive research has found no evidence that the disease can be
transmitted to humans.
CWD has been found in several western and mid-western states including
Colorado, Wyoming, Illinois, Wisconsin, Kansas, Minnesota, Montana,
Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma and South Dakota, as well as the Canadian
provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta. Recently, it has also been found in
New York and West Virginia.
Surveillance programs, like Delaware’s, have been established in all
eastern states and monitoring will continue in future years. So far, all
eastern herds seem to be disease free. DNREC will continue monitoring in
Delaware for the disease with plans for more tissue sampling this fall.
Hunters should be aware that more news regarding CWD will likely be
available in the near future. In the event a deer does test positive for
CWD in Delaware, or a surrounding state (Maryland or Pennsylvania), the
Division is in the process of formulating a CWD Response Plan so that
action can be taken immediately. Under the plan, regulations also may be
created in an attempt to keep Delaware free of CWD.
CWD related draft regulations will be the topic of a public hearing to be
held at 6 p.m. Tuesday, July 31 in the DNREC Auditorium at the Richardson &
Robbins Building, 89 Kings Highway, Dover. One would impose a ban on
importing high risk parts such as the brain, spine and lymph nodes from
deer harvested in areas where CWD has been detected. A second regulation
would require mandatory notification to the Division by a hunter if a deer
harvested out of state by a Delaware resident tests positive for CWD.
More information will be presented in the upcoming “2007/08 Delaware
Hunting and Trapping Guide” and hunters should monitor the Division’s
website and future press releases for final approval of these regulations.
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