Updated: 
21 September 2012 
| 6:30 am 
 
 
Disease 
raises concerns about deer farms in Iowa
 
 
Most cases found so far in state tied to confined 
animals
 
 
Iowa’s first seven cases of 
chronic wasting disease — all directly 
related to confined whitetail deer — have put a bull’s eye on the backs of the 
state’s deer breeders and the pay-to-shoot facilities they supply.
 
Critics of penned deer operations — mainly 
hunters and game managers — say captive deer are more likely than wild deer to 
spread the always fatal brain disease and that killing penned deer violates the 
“fair chase” premise that underlies ethical 
hunting.
 
“I’ve been crucified and demonized,” said Tom 
Brakke, a deer breeder and hunting preserve proprietor whose deer have been 
implicated in five of the state’s seven positive CWD tests.
 
Tim Powers, field director for the Iowa chapter 
of Whitetails Unlimited, said many Iowa deer hunters fear that wild deer will 
soon be infected and resent the role of game farms in the spread of the 
disease.
 
Confined deer operations are the “Typhoid Mary 
of the ungulates,” said Sen. Dick Dearden, D-Des Moines, chairman of the Senate 
Natural Resources Committee.
 
Like many other Iowa hunters, Dearden said he 
thinks the shooting preserves, where people pay to shoot deer in an enclosure, 
are more trouble and expense than they are worth.
 
“I don’t understand how people who shoot 
confined deer would call themselves hunters,” said Dearden, who observed that 
opposition to hunting penned animals is “probably the only issue that PETA 
(People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) and I agree on.”
 
Iowa recorded its first CWD case in July at the 
Pine Ridge Hunting Lodge near Bloomfield in Davis County.
 
The Department of Natural Resources, which 
regulates hunting preserves, and the Department of Agriculture and Land 
Stewardship, which regulates breeding facilities, have since confirmed six more 
positive tests — all but two related to the Davis County hunting preserve and to 
a Cerro Gordo County deer breeding facility, both owned by Tom and Rhonda Brakke 
of Clear Lake.
 
The Clear Lake facility has recorded a positive 
test, as have three deer raised at that facility and shipped to a combination 
shooting and breeding facility in Pottawattamie County, according to State 
Veterinarian David Schmitt.
 
The other two positive tests at the 
Pottawattamie facility involved a deer acquired from another Iowa breeder and a 
deer that was a natural addition to the herd, Schmitt said.
 
Tom Brakke said no deer have entered his 
breeding facility in the past 10 years and that his herd — about 500 deer at 
Clear Lake and more than 150 at the Bloomfield preserve — have been enrolled for 
the past nine years in a CWD monitoring program under which every deer that dies 
or is killed is tested for the disease. (story continues below 
map)
 
 
 “Nothing comes in 10 years. Every deer that died 
in the past nine years has been tested. The incubation period for CWD is 48 
months. How did I get CWD? That’s what I want to know,” said Brakke, who sees 
his investment of 20 years and $2.5 million rapidly disappearing.
 
While hunters worry that Brakke’s deer have 
already infected or will soon infect wild 
Iowa deer, it is “most definitely” possible that his deer could have been 
infected by wild Iowa deer, Brakke said.
 
Whitetail expert Willie Suchy, leader of the 
DNR’s wildlife research unit, said CWD is “more likely to show up among captive 
animals” because they are often moved from one facility to another, increasing 
their exposure.
 
Bryan Richards, a disease investigator for the 
U.S. Geological Survey National Wildlife Health Center in Madison, Wis., said 
captive and wild deer are equally susceptible to CWD.
 
Nevertheless, he said, disease outbreaks 
accelerate in a captive environment.
 
“You are forcing contact in a pen. A sick animal 
will soon have contact with every animal in the pen,” he said.
 
Richards said “there is ample evidence right 
there in Iowa that CWD moves through game farm enclosures.”
 
Both Suchy and Richards said managing deer in 
the CWD era would be greatly simplified and rendered more effective if there 
were an economical diagnostic test. Today’s standard test is performed 
post-mortem on brain cells, which can be extracted only from dead 
animals.
 
That penned deer are more susceptible than wild 
deer to chronic wasting disease is a “common misconception,” according to Wayne 
Johnson of Farley, a member of the Iowa Whitetail Deer Association board of 
directors.
 
With CWD confirmed in all of Iowa’s neighboring 
states, “it was bound to show up in Iowa,” he said.
 
One reason the disease showed up first among 
confined deer is that all confined deer in Iowa over the age of 1 are tested for 
CWD when they die, which compares with a small percent of the wild deer herd, 
about 1 percent in any given year, according to Iowa Whitetail Deer Association 
spokesman Scott Kent, who is raising about 250 whitetails on a combined hunting 
and breeding facility near Osceola.
 
Johnson, who keeps 13 deer in a 2-acre pen, said 
he raises whitetails for both fun and profit.
 
The few that he sells each year go to hunting 
preserves and bring anywhere from $500 to $5,000 each, depending on the size of 
their antlers, Johnson said.
 
Pine Ridge Lodge’s 2011 price list includes 
whitetail bucks from $3,500 for antlers in the 160 to 169-inch range all the way 
up to $30,000 for monster bucks with antlers measuring more than 300 
inches.
 
Another common misconception, according to both 
Brakke and Johnson, is that deer within hunting preserves are easy to 
shoot.
 
“They are still a wild animal, and they have a 
lot of room to run and hide” within a 320-acre enclosure, the minimum size 
allowed under Iowa law, Johnson said.
 
“I love to hunt myself, and if it wasn’t a real 
hunt I wouldn’t do it,” Brakke said.
 
DNR spokesman Kevin Baskins confirmed that the 
state’s first CWD-positive deer was shot just two hours after it stepped off the 
truck, which would not have given the animal much time to acclimate to its new 
surroundings.
 
Randy Taylor, chairman of the legislative 
committee of the Iowa Bowhunters Association, said the organization is concerned 
that commercial deer operations are threatening the health of Iowa’s wild deer. 
“We will recommend that the Legislature pass stricter rules governing the 
operation of deer breeding and shooting facilities,” Taylor said.
 
Dearden said he is “really looking at” 
revisiting state rules governing commercial deer operations in the upcoming 
session of the Legislature.
 
Although Department of Agriculture and the DNR 
appear to be working well together, the split jurisdiction is an area of 
concern, Dearden said.
 
Brakke’s 330-acre hunting preserve will be 
depopulated under an agreement with the DNR. The agreement allows Brakke to 
honor commitments for hunts previously scheduled between Sept. 8 and Dec. 25, 
said Dale Garner, chief of the DNR’s Wildlife Bureau. Any deer killed during 
those hunts will be tested for CWD and any remaining after those hunts will be 
killed and tested for the fatal brain disease, Garner said.
 
 
http://thegazette.com/2012/09/21/disease-raises-concerns-about-deer-farms-in-iowa/
 
 
“Nothing comes in 10 years. Every deer that died 
in the past nine years has been tested. The incubation period for CWD is 48 
months. How did I get CWD? That’s what I want to know,” said Brakke, who sees 
his investment of 20 years and $2.5 million rapidly disappearing.
 
While hunters worry that Brakke’s deer have 
already infected or will soon infect wild 
Iowa deer, it is “most definitely” possible that his deer could have been 
infected by wild Iowa deer, Brakke said.
 
Whitetail expert Willie Suchy, leader of the 
DNR’s wildlife research unit, said CWD is “more likely to show up among captive 
animals” because they are often moved from one facility to another, increasing 
their exposure.
 
Bryan Richards, a disease investigator for the 
U.S. Geological Survey National Wildlife Health Center in Madison, Wis., said 
captive and wild deer are equally susceptible to CWD.
 
Nevertheless, he said, disease outbreaks 
accelerate in a captive environment.
 
“You are forcing contact in a pen. A sick animal 
will soon have contact with every animal in the pen,” he said.
 
Richards said “there is ample evidence right 
there in Iowa that CWD moves through game farm enclosures.”
 
Both Suchy and Richards said managing deer in 
the CWD era would be greatly simplified and rendered more effective if there 
were an economical diagnostic test. Today’s standard test is performed 
post-mortem on brain cells, which can be extracted only from dead 
animals.
 
That penned deer are more susceptible than wild 
deer to chronic wasting disease is a “common misconception,” according to Wayne 
Johnson of Farley, a member of the Iowa Whitetail Deer Association board of 
directors.
 
With CWD confirmed in all of Iowa’s neighboring 
states, “it was bound to show up in Iowa,” he said.
 
One reason the disease showed up first among 
confined deer is that all confined deer in Iowa over the age of 1 are tested for 
CWD when they die, which compares with a small percent of the wild deer herd, 
about 1 percent in any given year, according to Iowa Whitetail Deer Association 
spokesman Scott Kent, who is raising about 250 whitetails on a combined hunting 
and breeding facility near Osceola.
 
Johnson, who keeps 13 deer in a 2-acre pen, said 
he raises whitetails for both fun and profit.
 
The few that he sells each year go to hunting 
preserves and bring anywhere from $500 to $5,000 each, depending on the size of 
their antlers, Johnson said.
 
Pine Ridge Lodge’s 2011 price list includes 
whitetail bucks from $3,500 for antlers in the 160 to 169-inch range all the way 
up to $30,000 for monster bucks with antlers measuring more than 300 
inches.
 
Another common misconception, according to both 
Brakke and Johnson, is that deer within hunting preserves are easy to 
shoot.
 
“They are still a wild animal, and they have a 
lot of room to run and hide” within a 320-acre enclosure, the minimum size 
allowed under Iowa law, Johnson said.
 
“I love to hunt myself, and if it wasn’t a real 
hunt I wouldn’t do it,” Brakke said.
 
DNR spokesman Kevin Baskins confirmed that the 
state’s first CWD-positive deer was shot just two hours after it stepped off the 
truck, which would not have given the animal much time to acclimate to its new 
surroundings.
 
Randy Taylor, chairman of the legislative 
committee of the Iowa Bowhunters Association, said the organization is concerned 
that commercial deer operations are threatening the health of Iowa’s wild deer. 
“We will recommend that the Legislature pass stricter rules governing the 
operation of deer breeding and shooting facilities,” Taylor said.
 
Dearden said he is “really looking at” 
revisiting state rules governing commercial deer operations in the upcoming 
session of the Legislature.
 
Although Department of Agriculture and the DNR 
appear to be working well together, the split jurisdiction is an area of 
concern, Dearden said.
 
Brakke’s 330-acre hunting preserve will be 
depopulated under an agreement with the DNR. The agreement allows Brakke to 
honor commitments for hunts previously scheduled between Sept. 8 and Dec. 25, 
said Dale Garner, chief of the DNR’s Wildlife Bureau. Any deer killed during 
those hunts will be tested for CWD and any remaining after those hunts will be 
killed and tested for the fatal brain disease, Garner said.
 
 
http://thegazette.com/2012/09/21/disease-raises-concerns-about-deer-farms-in-iowa/
 
 
by having the age limit on testing i.e. deer that are 16 months of age or 
older. it’s well documented that fawns are very susceptible to CWD at a early 
age, and the logic behind the 16 months of age or older for the testing of any 
dead deer will only lead to more CWD. it’s like the old flawed surveillance for 
Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease in the USA, and the threat of proven Iatrogenic spread 
there from, and then putting a age limit on CJD surveillance of anyone > or 
equal to 55 years and over, do not have to be reported, however, in the 55 year 
and older, the CJD infection rate jumps from 1 per 1,000,000 to 1 in 9,000, and 
the only folks to have been proven to pass the Iatrogenic CJD via tissues and 
organs are sporadic CJD victims. another example of industry regulations, i.e. 
BSE testing of cattle only 30 month and older. cattle have been documented with 
BSE as young as 20 months. 
 
 
 
 
 
Wisconsin : Six White-Tailed Deer Fawns Test Positive for CWD 
 
 Date: May 13, 2003 Source: Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources 
 
 
 
Contacts: Julie Langenberg Wildlife Veterinarian 608-266-3143 Tom Hauge 
Director, Bureau of Wildlife Management 608-266-2193 
 
 
 
MADISON -- Six fawns in the area of south central Wisconsin where chronic 
wasting disease has been found in white-tailed deer have tested positive for the 
disease, according to Department of Natural Resources wildlife health officials. 
These are the youngest wild white-tailed deer detected with chronic wasting 
disease (CWD) to date. 
 
 
 
Approximately 4,200 fawns, defined as deer under 1 year of age, were 
sampled from the eradication zone over the last year. The majority of fawns 
sampled were between the ages of 5 to 9 months, though some were as young as 1 
month. Two of the six fawns with CWD detected were 5 to 6 months old. All six of 
the positive fawns were taken from the core area of the CWD eradication zone 
where the highest numbers of positive deer have been identified. 
 
 
 
"This is the first intensive sampling for CWD in fawns anywhere," said Dr. 
Julie Langenberg, Department of Natural Resources wildlife veterinarian, "and we 
are trying to learn as much as we can from these data". 
 
 
 
"One noteworthy finding is simply the fact that we found positive fawns," 
Dr. Langenberg said. "These results do show us that CWD transmission can happen 
at a very young age in wild white-tailed deer populations. However, we found 
that the percentage of fawns infected with CWD is very low, in the area of 0.14 
percent. If there was a higher rate of infection in fawns, then fawns dispersing 
in the spring could be much more worrisome for disease spread." 
 
 
 
Dr. Langenberg noted that while the youngest CWD-positive fawns had 
evidence of disease-causing prions only in lymph node tissue, several of the 
older CWD-positive fawns had evidence of CWD prions in both lymph node and brain 
tissues -- suggesting further progression of the disease. 
 
 
 
"Finding CWD prions in both lymph and brain tissues of deer this young is 
slightly surprising," said Langenberg, "and provides information that CWD 
infection and illness may progress more rapidly in a white-tailed deer than 
previously suspected. Published literature suggests that CWD doesn't cause 
illness in a deer until approximately 16 months of age. Our fawn data shows that 
a few wild white-tailed deer may become sick from CWD or may transmit the 
disease before they reach that age of 16 months." 
 
 
 
One of the positive fawns was shot with a doe that was also CWD positive. 
Information about these fawn cases combined with will help researchers who are 
studying the age and routes of CWD transmission in wild deer populations. "More 
data analysis and ongoing deer movement studies should give us an even better 
understanding of how this disease moves across the landscape", said Langenberg. 
 
 
 
"Thanks to eradication zone hunters who submitted deer of all ages for 
sampling, we have a valuable set of fawn data that is contributing to our 
state's and the nation's understanding about CWD," Langenberg said. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
> > > Two of the six fawns with CWD detected were 5 to 6 months 
old. < < < 
 
 
 
Why doesn't the Wisconsin DNR want to routinely test fawns ? 
 
 
 
The DNR highly discourages the testing of any fawns regardless of where 
they were harvested. Of the more than 15,000 fawns from the CWD-MZ that have 
been tested, only 23 were test positive, and most of those were nearly one year 
old. It is exceedingly unlikely that a deer less than one year old would test 
positive for CWD, even in the higher CWD prevalence areas of southern Wisconsin. 
Few fawns will have been exposed to CWD, and because this disease spreads 
through the deer's body very slowly, it is very rare in a fawn that the disease 
has progressed to a level that is detectable. This means that testing a fawn 
provides almost no information valuable to understanding CWD in Wisconsin's deer 
herd and does not provide information of great value to the hunter in making a 
decision about venison consumption. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
> > > It is exceedingly unlikely that a deer less than one year 
old would test positive for CWD < < < ??? 
 
 
 
Chronic Wasting Disease in a Wisconsin White-Tailed Deer Farm 
 
 
 
and 15 of 22 fawns aged 6 to 9 months (68.2%) were positive. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
specific susceptibility? 194. It is probable, based on age-class specific 
prevalence data from wild cervids and epidemiological evidence from captive 
cervids in affected research centres, that both adults and fawns may become 
infected with CWD (Miller, Wild & Williams, 1998; Miller et al., 2000). 
 
 
 
198. In Odocoileus virginianus – white tailed deer, out of 179 white-tailed 
deer which had become enclosed by an elk farm fence, in Sioux County, 
northwestern Nebraska, four fawns only eight months old were among the 50% of 
CWD-positive animals; these fawns were not showing any clinical signs of CWD 
(Davidson, 2002). 
 
 
 
 
 
 
SCWDS BRIEFS 
 
 
 
Volume 17 January 2002 Number 4 
 
 
 
CWD News from Nebraska and Kansas 
 
 
 
Infection with the chronic wasting disease (CWD) agent recently was found 
in 28 of 58 formerly wild white-tailed deer in a high-fenced enclosure adjacent 
to a pen containing CWDaffected captive elk in northern Sioux County, Nebraska. 
 
 
 
Four of the positive deer were fawns approximately 8 months old, which is 
unusually young for animals testing positive for CWD. 
 
 
 
A January survey of 39 free-ranging deer collected within 15 miles of the 
positive elk and deer pens detected 8 (20%) infected animals. Test results are 
pending for additional deer collected inside and outside of the enclosure, and 
additional surveillance is planned for free-ranging deer in northwestern 
Nebraska. Previously, CWD had been documented in Nebraska in only two wild mule 
deer, both of which came from Kimball County in the southwestern panhandle 
adjacent to the endemic area of northeastern Colorado and southwestern Wyoming. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CWD in adult deer and fawns 
 
 
 
A hundred and thirty-three white-tailed deer in the study were killed after 
CWD was diagnosed in the deer within the fenced area. Paired samples of 
formalin-fixed tissue for CWD diagnosis and frozen tissue for DNA sequence 
analysis were collected. Fifty per cent (67/133) of deer were diagnosed with CWD 
(Table 2) using an immunohistochemical assay for PrPd in formalin-fixed, 
paraffinembedded brain and lymphoid tissues. 
 
 
 
Five of the CWD-positive deer were fawns, less than 1 year of age. 
 
 
 
Early CWD (PrPd detected in the tonsil or retropharyngeal node but not 
brain) was diagnosed in 14 deer (12 adults ranging from 1?5 to more than 5 years 
of age and two fawns). Late CWD (PrPd detectable in brain as well as lymphoid 
tissues) was diagnosed in 53 deer (50 adults ranging in age from 1?5 to 7 years 
of age and three fawns). None of the CWD-positive deer showed clinical signs of 
the disease (weight loss, hypersalivation, disorientation) or gross changes 
consistent with CWD (serous atrophy of fat) at necropsy. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Illinois CWD, see where there 2003 sampling showed 2. % of fawns tested had 
CWD i.e. 1 positive out of 51 samples. 
 
 
 
2003 
 
 
 
Boone-Winnebago Unit Fawn 51 1 2.0% 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2011 FAWN CWD POSITIVE ILLINOIS 
 
 
 
1/26/11 WINNEBAGO 344N 2E S36 F FAWN SHARPSHOOTING 
 
 
 
2/10/11 OGLE 341N 1E S7 F FAWN SHARPSHOOTING 
 
 
 
3/9/11 OGLE 341N 1E S7 M FAWN SHARPSHOOTING 
 
 
 
 
 
 
For example, in 2008 a fawn tested positive and in 2010 an infected 
yearling buck was detected in Smith County 
 
 
 
 
 
 
PPo3-40: 
 
 
 
Mother to Offspring Transmission of Chronic Wasting Disease 
 
 
 
Candace K. Mathiason, Amy V. Nalls, Kelly Anderson, Jeanette Hayes-Klug, 
Nicholas Haley and Edward A. Hoover Colorado State University, Department of 
Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Fort Collins, CO USA 
 
 
 
Key words: Chronic wasting disease, vertical transmission, muntjac deer 
 
 
 
We have developed a new cervid model in small Asian muntjac deer (Muntiacus 
reevesi) to study potential modes of vertical transmission of chronic wasting 
disease (CWD) from mother to offspring. Eight of eight (8/8) muntjac doe orally 
infected with CWD tested PrPCWD lymphoid positive by 4 months post infection. 
Six fawns were born to these CWD-infected doe. Six fawns were born to 6 
CWD-infected doe; 4 of the fawns were non-viable. The viable fawns have been 
monitored for CWD infection by immunohistochemistry and sPMCA performed on 
serial tonsil and rectal lymphoid tissue biopsies. PrPCWD has been detected in 
one fawn as early as 40 days of age. Moreover, sPMCA performed on rectal 
lymphoid tissue has yield positive results on another fawn at 10 days of age. In 
addition, sPMCA assays have also demonstrated amplifiable prions in maternal 
placental (caruncule) and mammary tissue of the dam. Additional pregnancy 
related fluids and tissues from the doe as well as tissue from the nonviable 
fawns are currently being probed for the presence of CWD. In summary, we have 
employed the muntjac deer model, to demonstrate for the first time the 
transmission of CWD from mother to offspring. These studies provide the 
foundation to investigate the mechanisms and pathways of maternal prion 
transfer. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
"PrPCWD has been detected in one fawn as early as 40 days of age. Moreover, 
sPMCA performed on rectal lymphoid tissue has yield positive results on another 
fawn at 10 days of age" 
 
 
 
Oral transmission and early lymphoid tropism of chronic wasting disease 
PrPres in mule deer fawns (Odocoileus hemionus) 
 
The rapid infection of deer fawns following exposure by the most plausible 
natural route is consistent with the efficient horizontal transmission of CWD in 
nature and enables accelerated studies of transmission and pathogenesis in the 
native species. Introduction 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wisconsin is home to about 500 deer farmers, and there are more than 8,000 
farms in the U.S., according to Laurie Seale of Gilman, who's president of 
Whitetails of Wisconsin. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
snip...please see full text ; 
 
 
 
 
Saturday, February 04, 2012
 
 
Wisconsin 16 MONTH age limit on testing dead deer Game Farm CWD Testing 
Protocol Needs To Be Revised 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monday, June 11, 2012
 
OHIO Captive deer escapees and non-reporting
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tuesday, September 11, 2012 
 
Agreement Reached with Owner to De-Populate CWD Deer at Davis County 
Hunting Preserve Iowa 
 
 
 
 
 
Wednesday, September 05, 2012 
 
Additional Facility in Pottawatamie County Iowa Under Quarantine for CWD 
after 5 deer test positive 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Friday, July 20, 2012 
 
CWD found for first time in Iowa at hunting preserve 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tuesday, June 05, 2012 
 
Captive Deer Breeding Legislation Overwhelmingly Defeated During 2012 
Legislative Session 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Saturday, September 01, 2012 
 
Resistance of Soil-Bound Prions to Rumen Digestion 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Friday, August 31, 2012 
 
COMMITTEE ON CAPTIVE WILDLIFE AND ALTERNATIVE LIVESTOCK and CWD 2009-2012 a 
review 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Saturday, June 09, 2012
 
USDA Establishes a Herd Certification Program for Chronic Wasting Disease 
in the United States 
 
 
 
 
 
 
*** Spraker suggested an interesting explanation for the occurrence of CWD. 
The deer pens at the Foot Hills Campus were built some 30-40 years ago by a Dr. 
Bob Davis. 
At or abut that time, allegedly, some scrapie work was conducted at this 
site. When deer were introduced to the pens they occupied ground that had 
previously been occupied by sheep. 
 
(PLEASE NOTE SOME OF THESE OLD UK GOVERNMENT FILE URLS ARE SLOW TO OPEN, 
AND SOMETIMES YOU MAY HAVE TO CLICK ON MULTIPLE TIMES, PLEASE BE PATIENT, ANY 
PROBLEMS 
PLEASE WRITE ME PRIVATELY, AND I WILL TRY AND FIX OR SEND YOU OLD PDF 
FILE...TSS) 
 
 
 
 
 
Wednesday, February 16, 2011 
 
IN CONFIDENCE 
 
SCRAPIE TRANSMISSION TO CHIMPANZEES 
 
IN CONFIDENCE 
 
 
 
 
 
PO-039: A comparison of scrapie and chronic wasting disease in white-tailed 
deer 
 
Justin Greenlee, Jodi Smith, Eric Nicholson US Dept. Agriculture; 
Agricultural Research Service, National Animal Disease Center; Ames, IA USA 
 
 
 
 
 
PO-081: Chronic wasting disease in the cat— Similarities to feline 
spongiform encephalopathy (FSE) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thursday, May 31, 2012 
 
CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE CWD PRION2012 Aerosol, Inhalation transmission, 
Scrapie, cats, species barrier, burial, and more 
 
 
 
 
 
Monday, September 17, 2012 
 
Rapid Transepithelial Transport of Prions Following Inhalation 
 
 
 
 
 
GAME FARMERS, CWD, AND THEIR COMMENTS...disturbing...frightening even. it 
seems they are oblivious to their own demise. ... 
 
see comments ; 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CWD has been identified in free-ranging cervids in 15 US states and 2 
Canadian provinces and in ≈ 100 captive herds in 15 states and provinces and in 
South Korea (Figure 1, panel B). SNIP... Long-term effects of CWD on cervid 
populations and ecosystems remain unclear as the disease continues to spread and 
prevalence increases. In captive herds, CWD might persist at high levels and 
lead to complete herd destruction in the absence of human culling. Epidemiologic 
modeling suggests the disease could have severe effects on free-ranging deer 
populations, depending on hunting policies and environmental persistence (8,9). 
CWD has been associated with large decreases in free-ranging mule deer 
populations in an area of high CWD prevalence (Boulder, Colorado, USA) (5). 
 
PLEASE STUDY THIS MAP, COMPARE FARMED CWD TO WILD CWD...TSS 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Saturday, February 18, 2012 
 
Occurrence, Transmission, and Zoonotic Potential of Chronic Wasting Disease 
 
CDC Volume 18, Number 3—March 2012 
 
CWD has been identified in free-ranging cervids in 15 US states and 2 
Canadian provinces and in ≈100 captive herds in 15 states and provinces and in 
South Korea (Figure 1, panel B). 
 
 
 
 
 
Friday, August 24, 2012 
 
Diagnostic accuracy of rectal mucosa biopsy testing for chronic wasting 
disease within white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) herds in North America 
 
The overall diagnostic specificity was 99.8%. Selective use of antemortem 
rectal biopsy sample testing would provide valuable information during disease 
investigations of CWD-suspect deer herds. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
TSS