OKLAHOMA ODWC ACTIVATES CWD RESPONSE PLAN AFTER DISEASED DEER FOUND WITHIN MILES OF PANHANDLE
ODWC ACTIVATES CWD RESPONSE PLAN AFTER DISEASED DEER FOUND WITHIN MILES OF PANHANDLE Sep 9, 2022
A white-tailed deer carcass recently recovered along a Texas road about 2.5 miles south of the Oklahoma border in the western Panhandle south of Felt, Okla., has tested positive for chronic wasting disease (CWD). The CWD positive deer was found in an area of Texas with a history of CWD detection dating back 3 years. Although not inside of our borders, due to the proximity of this finding to Oklahoma, the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation (ODWC) has activated the next stage of the CWD Response Plan that was jointly produced with the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food and Forestry.
“With the ability of deer to easily travel many miles in a day, the CWD Response Plan dictates that we respond to this finding as if CWD has now been detected among free-roaming wild deer in Oklahoma,” said Jerry Shaw, Wildlife Programs Supervisor with ODWC.
CWD is an always-fatal neurological disease that affects the brains of deer, elk, moose, and other members of the cervid family, creating holes that resemble those in sponges. It’s important to note in this area of the state that CWD does not affect pronghorn antelope, and CWD transmission from wild animals to humans or livestock has never been documented either.
No CWD-positive wild deer have been found within Oklahoma’s borders. But CWD has been found in two captive elk herds in the state. CWD has been confirmed in wild cervids in every state surrounding Oklahoma. In total, 30 states now have detected CWD within their borders.
The Wildlife Department has conducted CWD monitoring on hunter-harvested deer and elk and road-killed deer since 1999. The disease has not been detected in laboratory testing of tissue samples from more than 10,000 wild deer and elk from throughout Oklahoma.
The Wildlife Department will continue monitoring for evidence of this disease within Oklahoma’s borders and will release additional information, including ways deer and elk hunters can help with detection and mitigation as hunting seasons approach. Additional guidelines or restrictions will be distributed and well-advertised if determined necessary to further protect Oklahoma’s deer and elk populations.
TUESDAY, MARCH 08, 2016
Oklahoma Chronic Wasting Disease CWD of Deer and Elk Surveillance, Testing, and Preparedness
Oklahoma Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) of Deer and Elk Surveillance, Testing, and Preparedness
Chronic Wasting Disease CWD of Deer and Elk
Key Points
1. At this point there is no known cases of CWD in wild deer and elk in Oklahoma.
2. There has been no known transmission of CWD from deer or elk to any other animals or people even in states where CWD is found.
3. It is always wise to use common sense when handling any meat or when dealing with sick or injured animals.
"In 2006 more than 1,626 hunter harvested deer and elk were sampled in Oklahoma and all tested negative for chronic wasting disease. To date, some 7,088 animals have been tested statewide as part of The Wildlife Department's monitoring program and all have tested negative for CWD. The Department will continue to monitor the state's deer and elk herds through additional testing."
What is Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD)?
It was 35 years ago and the biologists were baffled. Blood work showed nothing unusual, liver and kidney tests turned up negative for all known diseases, but the mule deer were still wasting away to skin and bones. It could have been straight out of an episode of “The X Files.”
A few of the captive deer at the Colorado Division of Wildlife’s research facilities in Fort Collins had begun to lose weight on a diet that sustained other deer. They drank incessantly and spent much of their time standing listlessly in their corrals. The biologists knew they had a unique syndrome on their hands, but it was like nothing they had ever seen before.
Captive deer at Wyoming Game and Fish Department's Sybille Research Unit were soon showing signs of the mystery disease. Because the Colorado and Wyoming facilities regularly traded deer and elk, the appearance of the disease in Wyoming came as no great surprise.
Over the next 10 years, researchers worked to understand the origin and causes of the affliction, but their studies led to more questions than answers.
One thing was certain, the disease was deadly. Between 1974 and 1979, 66 mule deer and one black-tailed deer were held captive in Colorado and Wyoming research corrals. Of those, 57 contracted the strange disease and not one survived.
The search went on for the cause of the disease. Viruses, bacteria and nutritional deficiencies were all ruled out. Biologists named it "chronic wasting disease” (CWD), identifying the disease’s most devastating outward symptom, irreversible weight loss.
The first break in the case came in 1978, when wildlife veterinarian Beth Williams began analyzing tissues of affected animals. She found microscopic holes in brain and nerve tissues of the deer. The disease was turning the brains of these deer into Swiss cheese.
This finding put Chronic Wasting Disease into a small category of diseases labeled transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE). As pathologists looked into CWD further, they began to see similarities between it and scrapie, a TSE that affects sheep.
Sheep and goats have been affected by scrapie in Europe for centuries. In all those years, no other type of animal has ever come down with the disease, including generations of shepherds who work with their flocks daily and consumers who eat their meat and drink their milk.
Although they now knew CWD was related to scrapie and other TSEs, this helped little because at the time pathologists knew little about the cause of this disease either. The scientific camps began to stake their claim on the origins of these enigma diseases. Some thought it was a genetic illness, others assumed it was a virus too small to be detected by existing techniques. Several different scientists were pursuing proof of their favorite theories.
In the meantime, unsettling news was reported from the field. In March 1981, biologists in north Colorado brought in a sick elk that turned out to be suffering from chronic wasting disease. The disease had somehow spread from captive animals into free-ranging herds.
Cervids (animals such as white-tailed deer and elk ) seemed to be the target of CWD, no other animals including cattle, horses or humans have been affected by CWD. The disease spread incrementally through northcentral Colorado affecting mule deer, white-tailed deer and elk. In 1986, CWD claimed an elk in southeastern Wyoming, the first confirmed case of the disease in a wild animal outside of Colorado.
Although this was not exactly a raging disease outbreak, the spread of the disease had started and wildlife vets and biologists were concerned. They knew little about it, and knew nothing about how to stop it.
Today, 34 years since the disease was discovered, pathologists have learned more about the disease, but still have much to learn before they fully understand it. However slowly, CWD has continued to creep across the United States and Canada, currently impacting either captive or free-ranging deer in nine states and a pair of Canadian provinces. This includes a closely monitored captive elk herd in central Oklahoma.
It is now generally accepted that prions, naked proteins with the ability to duplicate and multiply, are the culprits to blame for CWD and other TSE’s. There remains no known cure or even a reliable method of disinfecting contaminated areas. Biologists in Fort Collins, Colorado, where the disease was first discovered, found out how resilient these prions can be. They set out in an intensive effort to rid the research facilities of CWD. All captive deer and elk were killed and buried. Personnel then plowed up the soil in the pens in an effort to bury possible disease organisms and structures and pastures were repeatedly treated with a powerful disinfectant. A year later, 12 elk calves from the wild were released in the sanitized holding areas. In the next five years, two of these elk died from chronic wasting disease.
Fortunately, Oklahoma’s free-ranging deer herd is not known to carry the disease. Over the past three years biologists and veterinarians have examined almost 400 deer and elk taken during Oklahoma's hunting seasons as part of the Department’s CWD monitoring program. All samples obtained from animals taken from the wild have tested negative and biologists will continue to closely monitor the deer and elk herd for signs of the disease.
Currently, detecting the disease is far from simple. The only acceptable test is a microscopic examination of an animal’s brain stem. There are no live animal tests and only a handful of laboratories and pathologists are qualified to administer the brain test.
If there is a bright side to chronic wasting disease it is that it reminds how valuable our deer are. It wasn’t that long ago that deer seemed headed down the same path as the buffalo and the passenger pigeon, over-exploited and pushed out by land-hungry settlers. Through the tireless work of biologists and sportsmen, deer have been restored to once unthinkable numbers in Oklahoma and across their native range.
A deer is a symbol of grace and it provides a succulent, nutritious meal. It is that and more, it is a wild animal that makes the woods a better place just for being there. It is as American as they come, inhabiting just about every ecotone on this continent.
To know that a disease as serious as CWD is spreading should pain everyone who has ever marveled at a deer slinking over a barbed wire fence. But it is no surprise that it was hunters who were the first to step up to the plate for the animals. In Oklahoma, a CWD monitoring program is in place thanks to funds provided through hunter’s licenses. In Wisconsin, it is hunters who have taken on the grim task of thinning out the deer herd to prevent the spread of CWD, and across the United States it is sportsmen who are carrying much of the financial burden to pay for biologists, veterinarians and pathologists to study the disease.
Is Venison Safe to Eat?
According to current research, there is no scientific evidence linking CWD to human diseases. It is recommended that hunters practice standard safety practices when handling any wild game, or any meat for that matter, as general precautionary measures.
These practices include washing your hands after handling raw meat and cooking the meat at an appropriate temperature.
"In my opinion, venison is just as safe as any other game meat," said Mike Shaw, head deer biologist for the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation.
Even in the parts of Wyoming and Colorado where chronic wasting disease is found, less than six percent of deer are infected.
A few precautions are recommended:
1) Don't shoot an animal that is acting abnormally or looks sick. 2) Wear rubber or latex gloves when you field-dress your animal. 3) Don't eat deer brains or spinal cord. 4) Bone out your deer meat and discard the brain, spinal cord, eyes, spleen, and lymph nodes.
Prions: New germs
In 1972 neurologist Stanley Prusiner lost a patient to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a TSE that affect humans. Prusiner was serving his residency at the University of California’s School of Medicine and was astounded by the lack of information about the rare disease.
Two years later he set up his own laboratory at the University of California-San Francisco and set out to get to the root cause of scrapie, Creutzfeldt-Jakob and other TSE’s.
He took two known facts about the disease and came up with an astounding conclusion. He knew that scrapie infected tissue showed no signs of foreign DNA. He also knew that the only disinfectant techniques that affected the scrapie "germ" were those techniques that broke down not only DNA, but also proteins. From these two facts he assumed that the scrapie "germ" was a simple protein without DNA.
The notion seemed impossible in scientific circles. Since the 1950’s scientists had been working on the basis that proteins were duplicated using a blueprint provided by DNA. Prusiner was saying that these proteinaceous infectious particles, or prions for short, could recreate themselves without ever using DNA. His theory was accepted with just about the same enthusiasm that early mapmakers shared with Columbus when he told them the earth was round.
Prusiner spent the next two decades proving his theory and his efforts were rewarded in 1997 when he won the Nobel Prize for medicine. Although a few skeptics still remain, it is now generally accepted that prions play a causative role in CWD and other TSE’s.
The Worth of a Healthy Deer Herd
Wildlife agencies across the United States are scrambling to protect deer herds in their areas from the ravaging effects of CWD.
It is no wonder why. Not only are deer a beautiful natural resource and part of a rich hunting heritage, they also provide a significant economic impact. The annual pilgrimage of hunters into the woods each fall means big bucks, in more ways than one. In Oklahoma alone, 261,000 hunters, most of which are deer hunters, spent over $2.6 million on hunting expenditures according to a recent survey. While hunters are after deer, they spend money to gas their vehicles, eat meals and purchase equipment. These dollars go back into Oklahoma communities, particularly those in rural areas.
In an effort to keep Oklahoma’s deer safe from CWD, the Wildlife Conservation Commission has suspended the import of live deer and elk into the state from states that have CWD in their free-ranging deer herds. By suspending import of potentially infected animals, the Department hopes to avoid the consequences of the disease and the potential costs of controlling CWD. The detection of the disease has had immense economic impact on states such as Wisconsin where the disease was discovered last year. Within the first month after detection, the Wisconsin wildlife management agency spent approximately $250,000 in control and public information efforts and will spend upwards of $2.5 million this year as a result of CWD control efforts. The agency continues to try to control the spread of the disease and has publicly outlined plans to kill all 30,000 estimated animals in the focal area where infected animals have been found.
Wisconsin is not the only state fighting CWD. As an example, a supplemental appropriation of $300,143 has been made in Colorado to help combat the disease and more appropriations are being considered. Saskatchewan has spent approximately $30 million in attempts at eradicating the disease in infected commercially operated game farms.
*** While elk were historically found in Oklahoma, the majority of the current private lands elk population found in the state is the result of animals that were either intentionally liberated or escaped from a captive facility.
*** Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in deer and elk – *** has been recently confirmed in a captive elk herd in Oklahoma County
FEBRUARY 2001 NEWS RELEASES
A degenerative brain disease similar to mad cow disease - called Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in deer and elk – *** has been recently confirmed in a captive elk herd in Oklahoma County, but has never been documented in wild deer or elk in Oklahoma. Even if the disease did exist in wild herds, there has never been a confirmed case of a hunter contracting it through hunting or eating venison.
http://www.wildlifedepartment.com/newsreleasearchive/2001/02-01nr.htm
Oklahoma Chronic Wasting Disease CWD TSE Prion Surveillance and Testing History ???
Oklahoma
Chronic Wasting Disease Surveillance in Oklahoma: Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a progressive, fatal, degenerative neurological disease that affects deer, elk, and moose.
First recognized in 1967 in captive mule deer in Colorado, CWD now affects free-ranging cervids in at least 15 states and 2 Canadian provinces. Research suggests that transmission may occur via several routes, with environmental contamination likely playing a significant role.
In 1998, a captive elk herd in central Oklahoma was diagnosed with CWD.
Infected animals in this herd originated in Montana, and although the herd was depopulated in September 2002, there remains the concern for possible exposure of native wild deer populations.
Since that time numerous captive cervid facilities have developed in Oklahoma.
Additionally, CWD has been located in free-ranging animals in multiple states including Texas, Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, and Missouri.
From 1997 to 2012, the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation (ODWC) in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service) Veterinary Services, and the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture took a proactive approach to protect Oklahomas deer and elk resource.
This approach helped to reassure hunters, the general public, deer processors, taxidermists, rendering companies, and the states trading partners that Oklahomas wild deer population is free of CWD and to reduce the potential threat to human health concerns.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) funding supplied to ODWC is to conduct surveillance for CWD in Oklahoma and at the Wichita Mountains National Wildlife Refuge (WMNWR).
Funding received during the first year of this project will focus on CWD surveillance in southwest Oklahoma, which includes the WMNWR.
Surveillance will shift to other regions of Oklahoma in subsequent years if funding is available.
Funding for this project was received through the USFWS National Wildlife Refuge System Wildlife Health Office.
As such, eligible entities for this funding are USFWS divisions and programs or State wildlife management agencies that form partnerships with one or more USFWS National Wildlife Refuges.
Hence, ODWC is one such entity and responsible for the management of white-tailed deer and elk populations in Oklahoma.
WMNWR and ODWC formed such a partnership in order to jointly utilize this funding and conduct CWD surveillance in Oklahoma and on the WMNWR.
Depending upon funding allocations, this project could be funded for up to 5 years.
Federal Grant Title: Chronic Wasting Disease Surveillance in Oklahoma Federal Agency Name: Fish and Wildlife Service Grant Categories: Natural Resources Type of Opportunity: Discretionary Funding Opportunity Number: F14AS00385 Type of Funding: Grant CFDA Numbers: 15.650 CFDA Descriptions: Research Grants (Generic) Current Application Deadline: Aug 14, 2014 Notice of Intent to Award Single Source Original Application Deadline: Aug 14, 2014 Notice of Intent to Award Single Source Posted Date: Aug 8, 2014 Creation Date: Aug 8, 2014 Archive Date: Aug 7, 2015 Total Program Funding: $32250 Maximum Federal Grant Award: $32250 Minimum Federal Grant Award: $6450 Expected Number of Awards: 1 Cost Sharing or Matching: No
Fish and Wildlife Service 703-358-2459
Ear tags had been discarded in the Oklahoma CWD elk case, causing uncertainty in trace-back (limited to Montana, Idaho, or Utah). Oklahoma:
-- In June,1998 CW) was diagnosed in a captive elk in Oklahoma.
-- The Oklahoma herd received more than 80 elk from commercial sources in Montana and Idaho.
-- Animals from the same origins as the Oklahoma herd went to 13 other ranches in Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Montana, Nebraska, Alberta, and Saskatchewan in the past 11 years, plus many secondary movements. [8]
-- no control or surveillance program.
Utah:
-- one trace-back zoo in Salt Lake City from elk possibly associated to Oklahoma game farm.
-- One 30 year old hunter dying of CJD of unknown origin (not familial or iatrogenic).
-- 135 deer sampled in 1998, 90 tested, all negative so far, pathology done in-state. Unpublished UF&G.
Montana:
-- Single trace-back elk game farm under quarantine from Oklahoma case, though importer destroyed ear tag.
-- Single trace-forward elk game farm that had bought elk from trace-back game farm connected to Oklahoma
Iowa, Illinois, Texas, and Wisconsin:
-- These states have trace-forward herds from an infected herd in Nebraska.
-- Missouri also sold elk from this herd at auction to buyers in unknown states.
-- Wisconsin has additional trace-forward game farms from affected South Dakota game farms [7]
-- Michigan allows deer to concentrate at bait stations, spread of tuberculosis attributed to this in NE Lower Peninsula [7].
Vermont:
-- ancedotal trace-forward herds from Colorado and Wyoming
Idaho:
-- no reported CWD, possible trace-back herd based on Oklahoma case, hold order on elk farm.
-- elk ranchers forced regulatory change to ag department to avoid regs.
PROGRAM GUIDELINES FOR OKLAHOMA CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE (CWD) CERVID SURVEILLANCE AND CERTIFICATION STATUS PROGRAM
Dec. 19, 2013
A service of the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation
Wildlife Department offering online public comment period for proposed regulation changes
Sportsmen have the opportunity to log on to
wildlifedepartment.com to voice their thoughts on a list of Oklahoma hunting and fishing related rule change proposals.
Most notable is a proposal to expand private lands elk hunting opportunity to statewide. For several years elk have been hunted on private lands in Caddo, Comanche, and Kiowa counties in southwest Oklahoma. More recently, Adair, Cherokee, Delaware, Mayes, Muskogee and Sequoyah counties in the northeast part of the state were added to the list of locations where these animals could be pursued by hunters.
While elk were historically found in Oklahoma, the majority of the current private lands elk population found in the state is the result of animals that were either intentionally liberated or ***escaped from a captive facility. A recent survey showed that at least 30 of the state's 77 counties are home to elk. The proposal will allow elk hunting opportunity in every county of the state. The popular controlled hunts program will not be affected by this proposal and will continue to offer hunters lucky enough to draw a permit the chance to pursue elk on certain state and federal managed areas.
Monthly Activity Report Wildlife Division: February Alan Peoples, Chief Bill Dinkines, Assistant Chief Wildlife & Lands Management
CWD-95-12- Attended SE Deer Study Group meeting in Destin, FL. Reviewed literature from other states regarding new CWD cases in Virginia, Missouri, and West Virginia. Discussed CWD response plan with USDA HVIC. Provided CWD status update for Oklahoma at SEDSG meeting in Florida.
Monthly Activity Report Wildlife Division: March Alan Peoples, Chief Bill Dinkines, Assistant Chief Wildlife & Lands Management
CWD9512- Assisted with 2 roadkill deer in NW OKC for CWD samples. Removed obex from roadkilled deer. Disposed of heads. Traveled to reported roadkill location, evaluated deer for suitability. Removed unsuitable roadkill from roadway. Researched IR camera purchase. Researched and purchased digital camera.
Monthly Activity Report Wildlife Division: January, 2013 Alan Peoples, Chief Bill Dinkines, Assistant Chief Wildlife & Lands Management
095-CWD-13- Pulled CWD sample on road-killed deer. Prepared quarterly report, determined rollover/add-on for next budget cycle. Submitted paperwork to APHIS. Checked on and purchased equipment for CWD grant.
Monthly Activity Report Wildlife Division: April, 2013 Alan Peoples, Chief Bill Dinkines, Assistant Chief Wildlife & Lands Management
095-CWD-13- Held a meeting with ODAFF regarding captive cervid program and shared concerns regarding transmission of CWD from captive herds to native animals. Met with ODWC Wildlife Div. staff prior to ODAFF meeting to solidify Dept. position.
Monthly Activity Report Wildlife Division: April, 2014 Alan Peoples, Chief Bill Dinkines, Assistant Chief Wildlife & Lands Management
F12AF00615- Big Game: Entered deer data from DMAP, DCAP and check station books onto spreadsheets. Entered student data for deer ages into spreadsheet. Completed DMAP summaries for each cooperator. Made copy of age sheets for each DMAP cooperator. Mailed DMAP summary packets. Sent DMAP summaries to each biologist for their properties. Bundled 10,000 carcass tags for 2014 season. Updated 2013 DMAP compliance spreadsheet. Made new 2014 spreadsheets for DMAP by biologists and by county. Aged deer jaws. Entered data, prepped data, edited data, and began SAS runs of data, started building tables for BGR. Research trailer and gun for SCI grant, prepped, and submitted grants request. Prep for field day in Okmulgee. Discuss CWD funding opportunity, responded to RMEF grant department on Dewey County survey, Send IE 2014-15 deer season dates. Submitted samples to SCWDS for testing. Discussions with supervisors about long range deer plan.
FEBRUARY 2001 NEWS RELEASES
> A degenerative brain disease similar to mad cow disease - called Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in deer and elk - has been recently confirmed in a captive elk herd in Oklahoma County Oklahoma Venison and Elk Safe To Eat
Recent media reports linking eating wild deer meat to a form of “mad cow disease” have been sensationalized, and hunters should not been worried about their venison, according to officials with the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation.
A degenerative brain disease similar to mad cow disease - called Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in deer and elk - has been recently confirmed in a captive elk herd in Oklahoma County, but has never been documented in wild deer or elk in Oklahoma. Even if the disease did exist in wild herds, there has never been a confirmed case of a hunter contracting it through hunting or eating venison.
“Chronic Wasting Disease has occurred in Colorado and Wyoming for 30 years, but nobody who has hunted there or eaten venison from those animals has come down with CWD,” said Mike Shaw, wildlife research supervisor for the Wildlife Department. “A hunter from Vinita contracted Creuztfelt-Jacob Disease (CJD), a related spongiform encephalopathy, in 1999, but the National Center for Disease Control never established a positive connection to his eating deer meat. We even investigated the possible link by sampling 16 deer from the area where the man hunted. None of the deer tested positive for Chronic Wasting Disease. In addition, we have tested more than 200 deer from other parts of the state, and those deer have all been negative for CWD.”
In fact, nationally there are over 11 million big game hunters, and only two confirmed reports of hunters contracting Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease, Shaw said. The Center for Disease Control investigated both cases and concluded that their contracting CJD was coincidental to hunting.
“There is always a risk involved with handling any type of animals, domestic or wild, but that risk is very small,” he said. “The odds are many times greater that someone would be struck by lightning or die from a bee sting.”
Shaw said there are two precautions that anyone concerned about chronic wasting disease can take. Wearing protective gloves when dressing and butchering animals and avoiding consumption of brain and spinal cord tissue are good precautionary measures.
Dr. Gene Eskew, a veterinarian with the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, said the captive elk in Oklahoma County are under quarantine, and they do not believe any infected elk have been killed for human consumption. Only four of the 140 elk have contracted the disease thus far. Agriculture Department officials will be watching for additional elk deaths, and will test the animals immediately through the National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Ames, Iowa.
“As a biological scientist who has studied deer most of my life, I can honestly say that I don’t see any danger in eating deer meat because there just isn’t any scientific evidence proving that Chronic Wasting Disease can cause Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease,” Shaw said. “There are far too many other things to worry about; real dangers like driving to work, having a heart attack because you don’t exercise enough or getting stung by a bee.
FEBRUARY 2001 NEWS RELEASES
A degenerative brain disease similar to mad cow disease - called Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in deer and elk – *** has been recently confirmed in a captive elk herd in Oklahoma County, but has never been documented in wild deer or elk in Oklahoma. Even if the disease did exist in wild herds, there has never been a confirmed case of a hunter contracting it through hunting or eating venison.
Farmed Cervidae
“Farmed Cervidae” are cervid species raised in captivity for the purpose of supplying the commercial hunting industry with livestock. In Oklahoma, the majority of this industry is whitetail deer with elk making up a smaller portion. These animals are intensively managed, fed, and selectively bred for antler mass, spread, and classification (typical vs. non-typical). Not all farmed cervidae are ultimately hunted, however. As global demand for venison rises, some animals are raised for slaughter, while other producers raise farmed cervidae for the sole purpose of hobby and enjoyment.
Current Topics
•License renewal applications for Farmed Cervidae Facilities will be mailed out in January and are due by April 1, 2016.
•Annual CWD Inventories and Triannual Tuberculosis/Brucellosis Testing is due between January 1, 2016 and April 1, 2016 for applicable herds.
•Cervid imports into Oklahoma from Missouri are once again permissible since Missouri is currently accepting cervid imports from Oklahoma.
Import Requirements
All cervidae imported into the state of Oklahoma must have the following: an approved permit application, valid certificate of veterinary inspection, proper identification, tuberculosis and brucellosis testing, and chronic wasting disease herd certification status. The permit application below explains these requirements in full. The veterinarian of the consignor in the exporting state completes and submits the permit application and certificate of veterinary inspection. The consignee of any import must hold a valid farmed cervidae facility license or commercial hunting area license. Cervidae imports are restricted from any county where Chronic Wasting Disease has been identified among free-ranging cervidae (map linked below).
•Cervidae Import Permit Application
•Import Requirements of Other States
• Map of CWD Positive Counties
Facility Licensing
Any farmed cervidae facility in Oklahoma maintaining whitetail deer, mule deer, red deer, or elk is required to be licensed by The Oklahoma Department of Agriculture. The purpose of facility licensing is multifold: to prevent the commingling of native cervidae with captive cervidae, to protect the farmed cervidae and hunting industries in Oklahoma from chronic wasting disease, and to protect the farmed cervidae and cattle industries of Oklahoma from the controlled diseases the two have in common. The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation licenses commercial hunting areas in Oklahoma where the majority of farmed cervidae are ultimately harvested.
•Farmed Cervidae License Application
•Oklahoma Farmed Cervidae Act & Rules
•Licensing Explained
• Carcass Disposal Regulations
Exotic Cervidae Species Registration
All species in the Cervidae Family (other than whitetail deer, mule deer, red deer, and elk) are currently considered “exotics” by Oklahoma regulations and are exempt from facility licensing. However, due to the concern of controlled diseases, owners of these species must register with the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture unless already licensed by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation or USDA Animal Care. This registration will also help keep registrants informed of any emergency disease information.
Exotic Cervidae Owner Registration Form
Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) Herd Certification Program (HCP)
The CWD HCP is a voluntary surveillance program designed to verify that a cervidae herd is low risk for CWD. Federal rule and program standards for interstate transport of cervidae and a national CWD HCP were passed in August 2012 and implemented by ODAFF. Herds that complete five years of the program with no evidence of CWD are designated as “certified” and are allowed to transport cervidae species interstate. Producers can purchase CWD certified cervidae and “inherit” the status of the original herd or can start with non-monitored animals at year one and work their way up through the program year-by-year. CWD herd certification not only allows herds to be moved interstate, it also adds value to a herd while helping producers protect the health of their animals. A CWD HCP application must be submitted to ODAFF and approved for participation in the program.
•CWD HCP Application and Inventory Form
•CWD Inventory and Inspections Explained Presentation
•Map of CWD Certified Veterinarians
•CWD HCP Federal Rule
• CWD HCP Program Standards
• USDA CWD HCP WebPage
*** Oklahoma Captive figures for CWD testing and surveillance will come at a later date, and this url will but updated...tss ***
*** •Cervid imports into Oklahoma from Missouri are once again permissible since Missouri is currently accepting cervid imports from Oklahoma.
Sunday, March 06, 2016
Missouri 2015-2016 CWD Surveillance Summary to Date, with confirmed cases mounting
Snip...See full text;
Tuesday, March 08, 2016
Oklahoma Chronic Wasting Disease CWD of Deer and Elk Surveillance, Testing, and Preparedness ???