Photo by Dave Jackson |
The dreaded
chronic wasting disease has shown up for the first time in wild deer in
Clearfield County, the heart of Pennsylvania’s traditional hunting territory
and adjacent to the state’s famous elk herd.
At a press
conference held by the Pennsylvania Game Commission Thursday, officials said
the very future existence of whiteailed deer and elk in Pennsylvania is at
stake. "We've got a big problem. The threat is real. The situation is
potentially dire," said Wayne Laroche, the Game Commission's wildlife-management
director.
A mature
buck in Bell Township, Clearfield County, was shot by a Game Commission officer
on June 7 on State Game Lands 87 after it showed signs of being diseased, the
agency said. The deer tested positive for chronic wasting disease, a disease
that is always fatal to infected deer and other members of the cervid family,
including elk. It's highly likely that means other wild deer are infected,
Laroche said.
CWD had been
found in captive deer at two different locations in the region in Jefferson
County in 2014, but this is the first case of an infected wild deer. Besides
being bad news for hunters in the big woods counties of the state, the Game
Commission also is worried now that the disease has spread closer to the
state’s elk herd. The infected deer is only 10 miles from the nearest elk herd.
Deer-hunting
in Pennsylvania is a $1.6 billion industry. And tourism surrounding viewing elk
has become a linchpin in local economies in northwestern Pennsylvania. More
than 100 elk are tested annually for CWD and so far none has been found with
the disease. But the history of CWD in other states has been to continue to
spread despite efforts to stop its progression by killing local infected
populations.
That's because
saliva and feces and urine that spread the disease is easily picked up by deer
because they are social animals. And the disease can remain on the ground for
up to 15 years, Laroche said. "Everywhere it has always increased. There
are no examples of it burning itself out." At best, wildlife managers can
keep the disease controlled, he said.
The
Commission reacted to the bad news by announcing a program to kill deer in the
immediate vicinity with sharpshooters and to issue 2,800 deer permits for
hunters to kill deer in the 350-square-mile Disease Management Area 3 this
fall. "It's important our response is as effective and efficient as
possible to attempt to curtail this disease before it becomes well-established
in an area where it not only is a threat to our deer, but also our elk,"
said Laroche.
The Game
Commission said 2,800 extra Deer Management Assistance Program permits for
hunters to kill antlerless deer in the upcoming seasons will be made available,
likely beginning today. The agency asked for hunters to let them know where the
deer are killed so the deer can be tested for CWD.
Sharpshooters
likely will be used after the deer seasons end. CWD has been an increasing
threat to whitetail deer in Pennsylvania and has also been found in 51
free-ranging deer so far in southcentral Pennsylvania since 2012. Some 25 wild
deer were found in 2016.
Pennsylvania
hunters reacted to the news with alarm and some with criticism of Game
Commission tactics to fight the spreading disease. "As I have been saying
for awhile now, CWD has long been established throughout Pennsylvania. There
will be no containment plan that works. All of the current solutions have
proven to not do much, yet the PGC continues to forge ahead with failing
plans," said one Pittsburgh member of the HuntingPA.com outdoor forum on
the Internet.
Another
hunter from Elk County countered with, "There is little doubt it is going
to eventually spread across most and perhaps even eventually all of the state
but the people who have studied the subject know it can be slowed greatly by
following the action plan in place by the Game Commission." Another blamed
the mess on captive deer farms that raise private deer herds to sell to
fenced-in private hunting preserves.
"The
only reason it is in this state and spreading is from deer farms and
transporting those deer. Every captive deer should have been killed years ago
and anyone moving one over the border should be locked up and fined to the
max."
For more on CWD go to:
From Lancaster Online
Ad Crable, 7-13-17
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