Cornell Lab Results Show No
CWD in Vermont Deer Tested
For Immediate Release: March 1, 2006
Media Contact: John Buck 802-476-0196, 241-3700
Cornell Lab Results Show No CWD in
Vermont Deer Tested
WATERBURY, VT The Vermont
Fish & Wildlife Department reports that test results from a
Cornell University pathology lab show none of the 276 deer
sampled from deer taken by hunters during Vermonts 2005 deer
hunting seasons was positive for Chronic Wasting Disease.
Chronic wasting disease (CWD)
is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) of cervids,
or members of the deer family. All TSE diseases are thought to
be caused by specific infectious proteins. Scrapie in domestic
sheep and goats, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) of
cattle are TSEs of domestic animals. Several rare fatal diseases
of humans are also TSEs. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) occurs
worldwide and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is associated
with the agent of BSE where it occurs in cattle.
First discovered in captive
deer in Colorado in the 1960s, CWD has since appeared in several
other states and two Canadian provinces. CWD was discovered in
central New York in 2005. It has not been found in Vermont.
CWD Is thought to be
transferred between deer through direct contact involving
saliva, urine, or feces as well as through processed feed
containing recycled carcasses.
A new regulation passed as a
disease preventive measure prohibits feeding or baiting wild
deer in Vermont to eliminate concentrations of wild deer around
artificial food sources.
A second new rule requires that
any deer or elk being brought into Vermont from any state or
Canadian province that has CWD, or any captive hunt or farm
facility, be in the form of boneless meat, hides or capes with
no part of the head attached, antlers with no meat or tissue
attached, finished -taxidermy heads, or upper canine teeth with
no tissue attached.
In June of 2003, Vermont Fish &
Wildlife joined the Vermont Agency of Agriculture in
implementing a joint moratorium on the importation of live deer
or elk into Vermont. Possession of any native wildlife without
permit is illegal in Vermont.
Currently, there is no evidence
that CWD can be transferred from members of the deer family to
humans.
The Vermont Fish & Wildlife
Department will continue to monitor and protect Vermonts
wildlife resources in close coordination with other state and
federal agencies. Vermont biologists are in close communication
with deer specialists throughout North America in order to be
up-to-date on the status of CWD in other states and Canadian
provinces. Vermont wild deer will be continue to be
sample-tested for CWD, and a protocol has been prepared in the
event CWD does appear in Vermont in the future.
To learn more about CWD on the
Internet, go to:
www.cwd-info.org
www.vtfishandwildlife.com/wildlife_importation.cfm
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/cwd/