Sunday, June 21, 2015

Michigan DNR works hard on containment and eradication of chronic wasting disease

Since the discovery in May of a free-ranging deer infected with chronic wasting disease in Ingham County, Michigan, the state’s Department of Natural Resources has been hard at work sampling deer from the immediate area for additional signs of the disease and putting into effect emergency precautions to prevent as much as possible spread of the disease.

So far, no additional infected animals have been found.

wildlife veterinarian working with deer carcassesChronic wasting disease is an unusual neurological disorder that affects members of the deer family. CWD is caused by prions – mutating proteins in the animal’s nervous system – not a bacteria or virus. A form of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, similar to mad cow disease, CWD causes lesions in the brain. Infected animals exhibit uncharacteristic behavior – they lose their fear of humans, for instance – and gradually waste away. CWD has never been shown to cause illness in humans.

The infected animal in Ingham County showed classic symptoms, said DNR veterinarian Steve Schmitt.

“The animal was found in a subdivision in Meridian Township showing neurological symptoms, standing there, letting people approach it,” Schmitt said. “And it was thin.”

Meridian Township police dispatched the animal and turned it over to the DNR, where it tested positive for CWD. Further testing at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Veterinary Services Laboratory confirmed that the animal was infected.

The DNR went right to work.

“The first step is ramping up our surveillance,” said Chad Stewart, the DNR’s deer and elk specialist. “We’ve determined that the disease exists in Ingham County and now we need to find out how prevalent it is and where else it may exist.

“We’re checking road kills and other samples. If we get on it very quickly, we have a chance to eradicate it. If it gets established, we’re pretty much in containment mode.”

First identified in a captive mule-deer herd at a research facility in Colorado in the late 1960s, CWD has since been found in 23 states and two Canadian provinces.

Michigan’s first case of CWD was in a private, captive herd in Kent County in 2008. Significant monitoring of deer from the county and surrounding area failed to discover another infected animal.

Since CWD was confirmed in Ingham County, 122 deer have been tested. None tested positive for CWD.

The bulk of the deer tested have been road kills, which are excellent test subjects, Schmitt said.

“An animal with neurological disease is more likely to step in front of a car,” he said.

Others have been shot under disease-control permits issued by the DNR and by the USDA’s Wildlife Disease unit, which the DNR contracted to take additional deer.

“This disease can exist in otherwise healthy-looking animals for months or years, but they’re still infectious,” Stewart said. “We’re optimistic that we caught this in time and we can remove enough deer and any infected deer from the population. We obviously won’t know that answer until we test more deer.”

Schmitt said two states that similarly found a single infected deer – Minnesota and New York – were able to prevent the disease from becoming established in their herds by “aggressive management.”

Schmitt said he was pleased that no additional animals have tested positive, but “we’re going to try to get our hands on every deer from the core area – within a 2-mile radius of the infected animal – that we can.”

Prions are passed from infected deer by excrement, saliva or even the dead carcass of an animal. The prions remain active for a lengthy period of time – how long is not fully known – but animals can pick up the disease from a contaminated environment.

“Those prions will bind with soil particles and stay infectious for years,” Schmitt said.

In addition to surveillance, the DNR has issued immediate orders applying to Ingham, Clinton and Shiawassee counties banning feeding deer year-round and baiting during hunting season. All three counties will have an early antlerless hunting season this year.

The DNR has established a nine-township Core CWD Management Area, which includes the townships of Lansing, Meridian, Williamstown, Delhi, Alaiedon and Wheatfield in Ingham County; DeWitt and Bath townships in Clinton County; and Woodhull Township in Shiawassee County. Unlimited antlerless deer licenses will be available in the core area this year.

Hunters will be subject to mandatory deer registration in the core area. They will be required to register their deer at a DNR check station before they take their deer outside the core area and will be instructed on proper carcass disposal.

When the fall deer season arrives, the DNR intends to issue unlimited antlerless deer licenses in the affected area and institute mandatory deer checks. Hunters will be asked not to take the carcass of any deer taken in the area outside the township in which it was harvested, though they will be allowed to have the deer processed by a licensed processor and will be alerted to test results.

CWD has never been known to cause human health effects, but health officials warn against consuming the meat of infected animals or the parts of the central nervous system of any deer, as a precaution.

“We hope the hunters will help by participating in mandatory check-ins, helping restrict carcass movement, and observing the feeding and baiting bans,” Stewart said. “We have to try to stop any potential spread or increase in prevalence on the landscape.

“A lot is going to depend on how much hunter participation we get. We’ve gotten the ball rolling, but we need a lot of samples from our hunters during the season. We need their participation.”

Currently, all deer being tested for CWD are being incinerated.

“We have one chance to try to eradicate this disease, so we have to give it our best shot,” Stewart said. “There are going to be some people who won’t like this – culling deer and unlimited antlerless permits – but it’s the best thing to do.”

People who see animals exhibiting neurological symptoms are asked to call the Report All Poaching (RAP) line at 1-800-292-7800. People who see road-killed deer in the nine-township area are being asked to report them to the Wildlife Disease hotline (517-614-9602) at the DNR Rose Lake Field Office.

For more information on chronic wasting disease, visit www.michigan.gov/cwd.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Extra Help for Hunting Acreage in Iowa

Iowa’s Habitat and Access Program (IHAP) will begin accepting new land for enrollment this summer after the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) was awarded a $3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture as part of the farm bill.
More than 8,000 acres was enrolled as part of the pilot program in 2011-14, providing much needed wildlife habitat on private land.
Landowners with land currently enrolled in a Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) could receive additional benefits by participating in IHAP. 
“This program allows landowners to meet their mid-contract management requirements of their CRP agreement, including out-of-pocket expenses,” said Kelly Smith, private lands program coordinator for the DNR. “Plus, the incentive rates could cover financial responsibilities under CRP, and any extra costs associated with developing higher quality habitat.”
Landowners interested in installing wildlife habitat or improving existing habitat should contact the DNR who will visit their property and together write a habitat plan that is submitted for consideration. If accepted, the DNR will provide an incentive payment in exchange for the landowner installing the habitat. Landowners determine the length of the agreement, ranging from three to 10 years, and participation is completely voluntary.
A list of DNR wildlife staff who works with landowners is available atwww.iowadnr.gov/Environment/LandStewardship/WildlifeLandownerAssistance.aspx.
The agreement allows hunters access to the portion of the property covered by the agreement, from Sept. 1 to May 31. Conservation officers will provide assistance and enforcement, if needed.
Increasing hunter access has been a focal point within the DNR and this program is an effort to address that need. The DNR placed survey boxes at existing IHAP locations and information submitted indicated hunters were satisfied with their experience and would like to see the program expanded. 
“Hopefully landowner interest in the program will continue and we can expand wildlife habitat and hunter access on private land,” Smith said.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

North Dakota Deer Hunting: July 1 Application Deadline for NDDOCR Archery Hunt

English: White-tailed deer
 White-tailed deer (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
An experimental antlerless deer archery season will open this fall on the North Dakota Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation land south of Bismarck.

Interested hunters must apply for an access permit from NDDOCR at www.nd.gov/docr (under the Archery Hunt header) before receiving a license. The deadline for applying is July 1 at 4 p.m. Only 25 access permits will be issued.

A maximum of 75 antlerless deer licenses will be available from the North Dakota Game and Fish Department’s Bismarck office. Each access permit holder can purchase up to three antlerless white-tailed deer licenses.

Other details, including areas open to hunting, is determined by the NDDOCR. For more information, refer to the NDDOCR website.

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

NRC approves 2015 U.P. antlerless deer hunting restrictions

Map of the U.P.
Map of the U.P. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Michigan Natural Resources Commission decided to eliminate the harvest of antlerless deer during the archery season for hunters using deer or deer combo licenses in the Upper Peninsula.
The restriction, which does not affect the firearm deer season, will be in effect for the 2015-2016 season. The NRC made the decision at its monthly meeting in Monroe, Michigan, in an effort to aid the Upper Peninsula’s struggling deer population, which has declined to a level comparable to the early 1980s following three successive winters with severe conditions.
There have been roughly 5,000 to 6,300 antlerless deer harvested in the U.P. by archers over each of the past four years.
Although deer regulations currently are on a three-year cycle, elements such as weather and disease can cause regulations to be reviewed mid-cycle and adjusted when appropriate.
“The NRC asked the DNR Wildlife Division to present options to address the decline in deer in the U.P. and associated concerns by hunters,” said DNR deer management specialist Chad Stewart. “In May we brought forward six possible options, and the NRC chose to concentrate on two of those options.”
The NRC’s decision makes deer and deer combo licenses used in the archery season “buck-only” licenses. The other option considered by the NRC was to maintain the current regulations.
“Deer hunting is an important tradition in Michigan’s U.P. and a big economic driver for the entire state,” said Natural Resources Commission Chair John Matonich. “This decision by the NRC will ensure that tradition continues while also providing prudent protections for the U.P. deer population.”
The winter of 2014-2015 brought significant snowfall before the start of the firearm season, which persisted to depths of 20-30 inches across much of the region.  Additionally, temperatures of -10 to -20 degrees arrived in February, further stressing animals that had limited mobility because of the deep snow.
These latest wintry conditions followed the winters of 2012-2013 and 2013-2014, which were extremely hard on the U.P. deer population.
The DNR Wildlife Division polled neighboring states on their recent and future deer seasons, and found those states also are reducing antlerless quotas or opportunities to take antlerless deer during specific seasons.
“We will be working to communicate this information to all who hunt in the Upper Peninsula,” Stewart said. “We’ll need to make sure hunters everywhere are aware of the change because once they cross the Mackinac Bridge the rules for their 2015 deer licenses will change.”
Antlerless harvest still will be permitted through the allotment of private-land antlerless licenses in deer management units where it was decided that antlerless harvest should be maintained. This includes DMUs 055, 122 and 155.
Deer and deer combo licenses can be returned for a refund and new licenses could be purchased prior to the start of the deer seasons. After Sept. 20, the licenses are considered “used” and cannot be returned. To learn more about the process for returning licenses, contact DNR licensing staff at 517-284-6047 or MDNR-E-License@michigan.gov.
For more information on hunting seasons and regulations, visit: www.michigan.gov/hunting.
To stay up to date on regulation changes like this, sign up for DNR email updates to get important natural resource news sent directly to you, when it’s happening.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

MDC changes deer hunting regs to help slow CWD

GRAY AREA: The northeastern Missouri counties of Adair, Chariton, Linn, Macon, Randolph, and Sullivan highlighted in gray show MDC’s original management area in and around where chronic wasting disease (CWD) was first discovered.

BROWN AREA: In addition, the northeastern counties of Knox, Scotland, Schuyler, Shelby, and Putnam, and the central Missouri counties of Boone, Callaway, Cole, Cooper, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, and Osage highlighted in brown show the expanded current CWD management area in and around where CWD has been discovered.
Lifting antler-point restriction and increasing availability of antlerless permits in key central and northeastern counties aim to slow the spread of deadly deer disease.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) is asking deer hunters in 19 central and northeastern Missouri counties to help limit the spread of a deadly deer disease through increased harvest opportunities this fall and winter. The Missouri Conservation Commission recently approved several changes to regulations for the upcoming 2015-16 fall deer hunting season that focus on slowing the spread of chronic wasting disease (CWD).
Chronic Wasting Disease infects only deer and other members of the deer family by causing degeneration of brain tissue, which slowly leads to death. The disease has no vaccine or cure and is 100-percent fatal.
“A primary way CWD is spread is through deer-to-deer contact,” explained MDC State Wildlife Veterinarian Kelly Straka. “Deer gathering and interacting in larger numbers can potentially increase the spread in an area. Young bucks can also potentially spread the disease to new areas as they search for territories and mates.”
REGULATION CHANGES
The regulation changes focus on slowing the spread of the disease in and around counties where CWD has been found. The changes will remove the antler-point restriction so hunters can harvest more young bucks. The changes will also increase the availability of firearms antlerless permits from 1 to 2 to help thin local deer numbers.
COUNTIES IMPACTED
These regulation changes add to similar measures MDC enacted in 2012 for six counties in northeastern Missouri after CWD was discovered in Linn and Macon counties. Counties affected by those regulation changes were Adair, Chariton, Linn, Macon, Randolph, and Sullivan.
The recent regulation changes add five more northeastern counties of Knox, Scotland, Schuyler, Shelby, and Putnam and come after six deer tested positive for CWD this past fall and winter in Adair County.
The recent regulation changes also include eight counties in central Missouri and come after a buck harvested in Cole County tested positive for the disease this past winter. Those counties are Boone, Callaway, Cole, Cooper, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, and Osage.
“The challenge with CWD is that there is no way to fully eradicate the disease from an area once it has become established,” said Dr. Straka. “While we do not expect short-term population impacts from the disease, CWD is likely to have serious long-term consequences to the health of Missouri’s deer herd. Therefore, we have and will continue to focus on slowing the spread of the disease among deer in the affected areas, and trying to limit the spread to new areas of the state.”
CWD TESTING RESULTS
The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) reports that a total of 16 new cases of CWD were found in free-ranging deer through its testing efforts this past fall and winter. Of the 16 new cases, nine were found in Macon County, six in Adair County, and one in Cole County.
These 16 new cases bring the total number of Missouri free-ranging deer that have tested positive for CWD to 26 overall since the disease was first discovered in the state in 2010.
MDC collected more than 3,400 tissue samples for CWD testing from harvested and other free-ranging deer this past fall and winter. The Department has collected more than 43,000 tissue samples since it began testing for the emerging disease in 2001. MDC will continue increased testing efforts this fall and winter in areas where CWD has been found.
MDC is also considering regulation changes for the 2016-17 deer season that would require testing of deer harvested during the opening weekend of the fall firearms season in the 19 counties in and around where CWD has been found.
DON’T TRANSPORT CARCASSES!
Dr. Straka said that hunters can also spread the disease by transporting and improperly disposing of potentially infected deer carcasses.  She explained that CWD can be spread through carcass parts that contain brain, spinal cord, eyes, spleen, or lymph nodes.
“To help prevent the spread of diseases, such as CWD, we strongly discourage deer hunters from moving carcasses of harvested deer from the immediate area,” she said. “If possible, remove meat in the field and leave the carcass behind. If it’s necessary to move the carcass before processing, place the remaining carcass parts after processing in trash bags and properly dispose of them through a trash service or landfill.”
She added that some parts of a harvested deer are safe to move out of the immediate area.
“Items that are safe to transport are meat that is cut and wrapped, or has been boned out,” she explained. “Also safe to transport are quarters or other portions of meat with no part of the spine or head attached, hides or capes from which all excess tissue has been removed, antlers including ones attached to skull plates or skulls that have been cleaned of all muscle and brain tissue, and finished taxidermy products.”
MDC is considering regulation changes for the 2016-17 deer season that would prohibit the movement of carcass parts from the 19 counties in and around where CWD has been found and prohibit the importation of certain cervid carcass parts into Missouri.
AVOID FEEDING DEER
Dr. Straka added that MDC strongly discourages hunters and others from feeding or providing salt and minerals to deer.
“Feeding and mineral sites can concentrate deer from a broad area and place them in very close proximity to one another,” she explained. “This can increase the transmission of the disease.”
A regulation that prohibits the feeding of deer and placement of consumable products -- such as salt and mineral blocks -- that are intended to concentrate deer is already in effect in Adair, Chariton, Linn, Macon, Randolph, and Sullivan counties.
MDC is considering a regulation change for the 2016-17 deer season that would expand that regulation to include the 13 additional counties in northeastern and central Missouri in and around where CWD has been found.
PUBLIC COMMENTS WELCOME
MDC welcomes public comments on the regulation changes under consideration for the 2016-17 deer season. Comment online at mdc.mo.gov/node/6.
DEER HUNTING IN MISSOURI
Missouri offers some of the best deer hunting in the country, and deer hunting is an important part of many Missourians' lives and family traditions. The continued spread of CWD in Missouri is likely to reduce future hunting and wildlife-watching opportunities for Missouri's nearly 520,000 deer hunters and almost two million wildlife watchers. Deer hunting is also an important economic driver in Missouri and gives a $1 billion annual boost to the state and local economies.
DEER HUNTING DATES
Fall deer hunting season dates are as follows.
  • Archery: Sept. 15 to Nov. 13 and Nov. 25 to Jan. 15
  • Urban Firearms: Oct. 9 to 12
  • Youth Firearms: Oct. 31 to Nov. 3 and Jan. 2 and 3, 2016
  • November Firearms: Nov. 14 to 24
  • Antlerless Firearms: Nov. 25 to Dec. 6
  • Alternative Methods: Dec. 19 to 29

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Service Proposes Expansion of Hunting and Fishing Opportunities on National Wildlife Refuges

Logo of the United States Fish and Wildlife Se...


U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe today announced as part of
Great Outdoors Month the agency is proposing to expand fishing and hunting
opportunities on 21 refuges throughout the National Wildlife Refuge System.
The proposed rule also modifies existing refuge-specific regulations for
more than 100 additional refuges and wetland management districts.

“The Service is committed to strengthening and expanding hunting and
fishing opportunities,” said Ashe.  “By expanding hunting and fishing
programs across the Refuge System we are furthering a rich tradition of
providing quality recreational opportunities to the American people. These
programs support local economies, help people connect with the outdoors,
and encourage people to value nature.”

National wildlife refuges provide premier outdoor recreational
opportunities across the Nation. There are more than 560 national wildlife
refuges and 38 wetland management districts, including one within an hour’s
drive from most major metropolitan areas. The Service manages refuge
hunting and fishing programs to ensure sustainable wildlife populations,
while offering traditional wildlife-dependent recreation on public lands.

Under the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997, the
Service permits hunting and fishing along with four other types of
wildlife-dependent recreation when they are compatible with an individual
refuge’s purpose and mission. Hunting, within specified limits, is
permitted on 335 wildlife refuges. Fishing is permitted on 271 wildlife
refuges.

Hunting, fishing and other outdoor activities on refuges help stimulate the
economy and generate funding for wildlife conservation. The Service’s
report *Banking on Nature* <http://www.fws.gov/refuges/about/RefugeReports/>
shows that refuges pump $2.4 billion into the economy and support more than
35,000 jobs. More than 47 million people visit refuges every year.

Other wildlife-dependent recreation on national wildlife refuges includes
wildlife photography, environmental education, wildlife observation and
interpretation.