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  • Chronic Wasting Disease Found in San Juan Deer Hunting Unit
    by Mark Hadley
    Published - 12/26/11 - 07:48 AM | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
    An elk afflicted with chronic wasting disease. (DWR photo/Beth Williams)
    An elk afflicted with chronic wasting disease. (DWR photo/Beth Williams)
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    (Logan, UT) - A deer infected with chronic wasting disease has been found in a new area of Utah. That's not a surprise, though, the new area is next to an area where the disease has been for years.

    Technicians at the Utah Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory in Logan have finished testing tissue samples taken from more than 1,200 deer, elk and moose this fall.

    Hunters across Utah took the animals, and biologists with the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources collected the samples.

    One of the deer that was taken on the San Juan deer hunting unit in southeastern Utah tested positive for the disease. This is the first time a deer from the unit has tested positive for chronic wasting disease (CWD).

    Leslie McFarlane, wildlife disease coordinator for the DWR, said she's not surprised that a deer from the San Juan unit tested positive for CWD. "We've found deer with CWD on the La Sal Mountains," she said. "The La Sal Mountains are just north of the San Juan unit."

    Fortunately for Utah's deer herds, CWD is not widespread in Utah. Since 2002, almost 19,000 deer have been tested in the state and of the nearly 19,000 deer, only 54 tested positive for CWD.

    The 54 deer came from three major areas in Utah:

    Area - Number of deer

    Southeastern Utah 38

    Central Utah 10

    Northeastern Utah 6

    One elk, no moose

    To date, only one elk, a cow taken on the La Sal Mountains in November 2009, has tested positive for the disease.

    CWD has never been found in a moose in Utah.

    CWD is fatal to deer, elk and moose. But there's no evidence that it can be transmitted to humans.

    More information about Chronic Wasting Disease, go to www.cwd-info.org.

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