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    Texas Chronic Wasting Disease Discovered at a Deer Breeding Facility in Duval County

    Chronic Wasting Disease Discovered at a Deer Breeding Facility in Duval County

    Aug. 27, 2021 Media Contact: TPWD News, Business Hours, 512-389-8030 News Image Share on Facebook Share Release URL

    AUSTIN – Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) has been discovered in a deer breeding facility in Duval County, marking the first positive detection of the disease in the county.

    The tissue samples were submitted by the deer breeding facility as part of required CWD surveillance programs. The samples indicated the presence of CWD during testing at the Texas A&M Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory (TVMDL) in College Station on August 18. The National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Ames, Iowa confirmed CWD in those tissue samples on August 25.

    Officials have taken immediate action to secure all deer at the facility and plan to conduct additional investigations for CWD. In addition, other breeding facilities that received deer from this facility or shipped deer to this facility during the last five years are under movement restrictions and cannot move or release deer at this time.

    Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) and Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC) are working together to determine the extent of the disease within the facility and evaluate risks to Texas’ free ranging deer populations. Quick detection of CWD can help mitigate the disease’s spread.

    “Early detection and containment remain critical strategies in our efforts to help mitigate the risk of further spread of this disease,” said Carter Smith, TPWD Executive Director. “There is too much at stake across Texas to do otherwise.”

    Animal health and wildlife officials will conduct an epidemiological investigation in an effort to determine the source and potential dispersal of the disease from this facility, but the nature of CWD will likely prevent definitive findings.

    “The incubation period of CWD can span years creating disease detection and management challenges,” said Dr. Andy Schwartz, TAHC State Veterinarian. “Response staff are diligently working to address each herd affected by this new detection to manage further spread.”

    CWD was first recognized in 1967 in captive mule deer in Colorado. CWD has also been documented in captive and/or free-ranging deer in 26 states and 3 Canadian provinces.

    In Texas, the disease was first discovered in 2012 in free-ranging mule deer along a remote area of the Hueco Mountains near the Texas-New Mexico border and has since been detected in 260 captive or free-ranging cervids, including white-tailed deer, mule deer, red deer and elk in 14 Texas counties. For more information on previous detections visit the CWD page on the TPWD website.

    CWD is a fatal neurological disease found in certain cervids, including deer, elk, moose and other members of the deer family. CWD is a slow and progressive disease. Due to a long incubation, cervids infected with CWD may not produce any visible signs for a number of years after becoming infected. As the disease progresses, animals with CWD show changes in behavior and appearance. Clinical signs may include, progressive weight loss, stumbling or tremors with a lack of coordination, excessive thirst, salivation or urination, loss of appetite, teeth grinding, abnormal head posture, and/or drooping ears.

    To date there is no evidence that CWD poses a risk to humans or non-cervids. However, as a precaution, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the World Health Organization recommend not to consume meat from infected animals.



    Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission Special Meeting on CWD Set for Sept. 15
    Aug. 27, 2021

    Media Contact: TPWD News, Business Hours, 512-389-8030

    AUSTIN— The Texas Parks and Wildlife (TPW) Commission will hold a special meeting on proposed rules related to Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD). Earlier this year, the discovery of CWD in six deer breeding facilities necessitated the filing of emergency rules in an attempt to stop the further spread of this disease. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) staff has been working with Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC) and numerous stakeholder groups to develop rules that will ultimately replace the emergency rules.

    On Sept. 15, the TPW Commission will hear invited testimony from TPWD and TAHC staff, CWD experts and stakeholder groups. TPWD staff will provide a briefing on proposed rules intended to replace the emergency rules and seek guidance from the TPW Commission on publishing rules for public comment and potential adoption on Nov. 4, at a regularly scheduled TPW Commission Meeting.

    Details for the meeting are as follows:
    WHEN: 9 a.m., (CST) Wednesday, September 15
    WHERE: Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
    Commission Hearing Room
    4200 Smith School Road
    Austin, TX 78744

    A live audio stream will be available on the TPWD website.



    terry

    Comment


      FRIDAY, OCTOBER 01, 2021

      TEXAS CWD TSE PRION recent discoveries of new cases bring the total number of positive deer to 261 in 14 counties

      To date, 168 of those positives are associated with captive breeding facilities,

      25 from release sites associated with those positive captive breeding facilities,

      and 68 in free-ranging deer populations. Fifty-seven of the free-range positives are in the Trans Pecos and Texas panhandle, with the remaining 11 in Medina and Val Verde counties.

      http:// https://tpwd.texas.gov/newsmedia/rel...ce=govdelivery

      Comment


        So...These facilities are having to kill their animals?? How many of the animals that have been killed have actually tested positive for CWD? Is it really helping this cause?

        Comment


          Originally posted by coach51 View Post
          So...These facilities are having to kill their animals?? How many of the animals that have been killed have actually tested positive for CWD? Is it really helping this cause?
          Looks like 193 of them.

          Is it really helping? Probably. The question is how much does it help.

          Comment


            Originally posted by coach51 View Post
            So...These facilities are having to kill their animals?? How many of the animals that have been killed have actually tested positive for CWD? Is it really helping this cause?
            They kill a LOT of the breeder deer that do not have CWD. Hence the strong hatred towards it. How many wild deer have they killed to test? None. They have killed breeder deer in close proximity to the known infected one/s.

            Comment


              Judging by the map the deer breeders have successfully spread the disease across the entire state. Congrats mfers.

              Comment


                Part of the problem with CWD is it's very slow development. A negative test does not necessarily mean negative. It means none detected. It can take up to 5 years from the time of infection for the disease to manifest itself. TPWD answer has been to depopulate and then test all deer killed in a 5 mile radius for 5 years. Is it the answer? No one knows, including TPWD.

                Comment


                  Originally posted by Ag 89 View Post
                  Part of the problem with CWD is it's very slow development. A negative test does not necessarily mean negative. It means none detected. It can take up to 5 years from the time of infection for the disease to manifest itself. TPWD answer has been to depopulate and then test all deer killed in a 5 mile radius for 5 years. Is it the answer? No one knows, including TPWD.
                  But only depopulate the breeder deer. A guys livelihood.


                  Yes M16 I’m aware of your stance. I get it. I don’t like breeders to a point. I know lots in the business. The ones that blatantly disregarded the rules should pay. But killing a ton of expensive deer and destroying an operation that took a long time to build isn’t the best answer. But idk what is. TPWD aren’t treating the low vs high fence the same. Careful what you wish for. They may target exotics and all high fence next. And I know you have/had high fence operations yourself.

                  The transpecos deer being infected was 99.9% not the result of a breeder. So there’s that. It’s a bad deal all around.

                  Comment


                    Kill all captive herds and burn the facilities to the ground. Fn shi-theads.

                    Get on the ball Legislatures, TPWD and TAHC. Shutem down yesterday. Cease and cancel all TTT breeder permits effective immediately. Every single TTT deer tested and quarantined.

                    Alternatively, allow the collapse and infection of all Texas deer herds and mutation to jump to humans. Wait and see the financial and medical schit show after the jump to humans occurs. It wont hurt local economies at all. Maybe endemic infection will help deer lease prices to come down.
                    Last edited by Briar Friar; 10-07-2021, 11:52 AM.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by trophy8 View Post
                      But only depopulate the breeder deer. A guys livelihood.

                      It’s a bad deal all around.
                      I think they depopulate the breeder deer because they can, they are inside a fence. If they could figure a way to kill them on a low fence place, I bet they would. Would it solve the problem? Probably not. Would it slow it down? Who knows. It is a very large can of worms that has been opened with this disease. TPWD says you don't own the deer but you could fence them. You could sell one or buy one and put it on your property, you could sell it's semen and it's offspring. How is that not owning it? However, if that tagged deer escapes your property and someone else kills it you have no repercussions like you would if someone shot one of your cows.
                      This is the cluster we are in because no one had the crystal ball to see the amazing amount of money people are willing to spend in order to kill a bigger whitetail deer and the ingenious ways other people will devise to make that happen for their customers.

                      Comment


                        Originally posted by Ag 89 View Post
                        I think they depopulate the breeder deer because they can, they are inside a fence. If they could figure a way to kill them on a low fence place, I bet they would. Would it solve the problem? Probably not. Would it slow it down? Who knows. It is a very large can of worms that has been opened with this disease. TPWD says you don't own the deer but you could fence them. You could sell one or buy one and put it on your property, you could sell it's semen and it's offspring. How is that not owning it? However, if that tagged deer escapes your property and someone else kills it you have no repercussions like you would if someone shot one of your cows.
                        This is the cluster we are in because no one had the crystal ball to see the amazing amount of money people are willing to spend in order to kill a bigger whitetail deer and the ingenious ways other people will devise to make that happen for their customers.
                        Agreed! I’m far from the person with an answer. But I can certainly see the bias between old money low fence ranches and breeders. They’ve never seen eye to eye. And anyone that disputes that is nuts. Doesn’t make either side right.

                        I’m sure the breeding industry’s days are numbered.

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by trophy8 View Post
                          But only depopulate the breeder deer. A guys livelihood.


                          Yes M16 I’m aware of your stance. I get it. I don’t like breeders to a point. I know lots in the business. The ones that blatantly disregarded the rules should pay. But killing a ton of expensive deer and destroying an operation that took a long time to build isn’t the best answer. But idk what is. TPWD aren’t treating the low vs high fence the same. Careful what you wish for. They may target exotics and all high fence next. And I know you have/had high fence operations yourself.

                          The transpecos deer being infected was 99.9% not the result of a breeder. So there’s that. It’s a bad deal all around.
                          I hate this argument The Hueco Mountains are 375 miles from Medina County.

                          It doesn't matter that they are in the same state. It's distance. It's the equivalent of saying Georgia positives wouldn't be the result of Pennsylvania Deer Breeder Operations.

                          Duh. What's your point?

                          Comment


                            Originally posted by Encinal View Post
                            I hate this argument The Hueco Mountains are 375 miles from Medina County.

                            It doesn't matter that they are in the same state. It's distance. It's the equivalent of saying Georgia positives wouldn't be the result of Pennsylvania Deer Breeder Operations.

                            Duh. What's your point?
                            It’s naturally occurring. It didn’t form in a pen.


                            A biologist and a buddy had a conversation last week that had an interesting twist. State biologist. Theory from the state side(unofficial) is that birds have carried it. Eat. Then poop. Then deer pick it up.

                            Truth? Who knows. But seems logical.

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by trophy8 View Post
                              Agreed! I’m far from the person with an answer. But I can certainly see the bias between old money low fence ranches and breeders. They’ve never seen eye to eye. And anyone that disputes that is nuts. Doesn’t make either side right.

                              I’m sure the breeding industry’s days are numbered.
                              This is another red herring argument. These problems are happening in every state that has breeding operations. Are old money low fence Texas ranchers fighting the spread of CWD in every state?

                              The answer is pretty obvious. CWD is getting fought because it is a threat to wild deer populations. It's being fought by people who appreciate that resource all over the country.

                              There is no competition between low fence ranchers and breeders.

                              They are different hunts entirely, and everyone on this forum knows it.

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by Encinal View Post
                                This is another red herring argument. These problems are happening in every state that has breeding operations. Are old money low fence Texas ranchers fighting the spread of CWD in every state?

                                The answer is pretty obvious. CWD is getting fought because it is a threat to wild deer populations. It's being fought by people who appreciate that resource all over the country.

                                There is no competition between low fence ranchers and breeders.

                                They are different hunts entirely, and everyone on this forum knows it.
                                I’ve heard both sides. I prefer the big free range “native” deer. So don’t think I’m being one sided on that. I’ve heard the talks over the years. Seen it both ways. It’s all opinions brother. And tackling CWD is an issue that’s anyone’s guess.

                                Comment

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