CHRONIC WASTING
DISEASE NOT DETECTED IN OHIO DEER
Testing conducted during last year's deer-gun season
COLUMBUS, OH - For the sixth straight year,
testing of Ohio's deer herd has found no evidence of chronic wasting
disease (CWD), a degenerative brain disease that affects elk, mule deer
and white-tailed deer.
According to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) Division of
Wildlife,
state officials collected 941 samples last year from hunter-harvested
deer, primarily during the deer-gun season that ran November 26-December
2. All CWD testing is performed at the Animal Disease Diagnostic
Laboratory of the Ohio Department of Agriculture (ODA).
In addition to CWD, 97 percent of the hunter-harvested deer samples were
also tested for bovine tuberculosis. Results found no evidence of this
disease in Ohio deer.
Additional CWD samples are being taken from road-killed deer, but those
test results are not yet available.
Since 2002, the Division of Wildlife, in conjunction with the ODA's
Division of Animal Industry and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, has been conducting
surveillance throughout the state for CWD, as well as epizootic
hemorrhagic disease and bovine tuberculosis. While CWD has never been
found in Ohio's deer herd, it had been diagnosed in wild and/or captive
deer or elk in 14 other states and two Canadian provinces. Since CWD was
discovered in the Western United States in the late 1960s, there has been
no evidence that the disease can be transmitted to humans.
The Division of Wildlife continues to carefully monitor the health of
Ohio's deer herd throughout the year. For the latest information on CWD,
visit
wildohio.com or the Chronic Wasting Disease Alliance at
cwd-info.org . To view individual
test results visit the Ohio Department of Agriculture's Web site at
ohioagriculture.gov/cwd/
.
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For Further Information
Contact:
Suzie Prange, Division of Wildlife
(740) 589-9924
-or-
Vicki Ervin, Division of Wildlife
(614) 265-6325