Washington Dept. of Fish and Wildlife Species of Concern

Chronic Wasting Disease
Introduction
WDFW Fact Sheet on CWD
WDFW GameTrails: CWD Information
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Chronic Wasting Disease Program 1996-2003
IAFWA: An Overview of Chronic Wasting Disease - A Threat to Wildlife
CWD Survery Results
Related Links
Chronic Wasting Disease Alliance
World Health Organization
USGS National Wildlife Health Center
USDA
Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study Briefs (PDF 79KB)
Colorado
Wisconsin

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IMPORTANT
Hunters can check the results of their harvest online using the CWD Survery Results form

Introduction

Chronic wasting disease (CWD), a progressive, fatal illness of deer and elk, has not been found in Washington's wildlife, despite on-going testing of hundreds of animals. However, the disease has gained national attention after being discovered in at least 14 other states (Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, Utah, New York, and West Virginia) and the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan.

There is no scientific evidence at this time to suggest that CWD can be transmitted from deer or elk to humans. However, much remains unknown about the way the disease is spread and hunters may wish to take basic precautions in dressing and handling deer and elk.

This webpage was created as part of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife's overall effort to educate the public about chronic wasting disease. Besides basic facts about the disease, this site includes information on continued disease testing of Washington wild deer and elk and links to other federal and state websites on chronic wasting disease.


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Hunter Precautions
Chronic wasting disease has not been found in Washington, and there currently is no scientific evidence of CWD being transmitted from deer or elk to humans. However, hunters who wish to take additional precautions may choose to avoid consuming the brain, spinal cord, eyes, spleen, pancreas, or lymph nodes of harvested deer and elk, since the CWD prion accumulates in these tissues. As always, WDFW advises hunters to avoid harvesting any animal that appears sick or is behaving strangely, to wear rubber gloves while field dressing game, and to thoroughly wash hands and equipment after processing carcasses.

IMPORTANT NEWS

Wildlife officials urge hunters to follow rules on import of bone-in deer, elk carcasses -Sep 2005

Hunters urged to help test for deer, elk disease
-Aug 2005

Commission adopts permanent CWD rules
-Dec 2004

Chronic wasting disease rules on agenda for Fish and Wildlife Commission meeting, Dec. 3-4
-Nov 2004

Training for volunteer deer and elk checkers -Oct 2004

Hunter incentives offered for southwest Washington deer-disease screening effort - Sep 2004

WDFW seeks hunters' help in North Puget Sound deer disease screening
- Sep 2004

Hunters could face penalties on import of some bone-in deer, elk carcasses
- Aug 2004

RULE CHANGE: Restrictions set on importation of non-resident deer and elk carcasses
- Aug 2004

Commission to review chronic wasting disease rule, waterfowl seasons at Aug. 6-7 meeting in Lynnwood
- Jul 2004

Ban proposed on out-of-state deer, elk carcasses
- Jul 2004

Three-year monitoring effort shows state deer and elk free of wasting disease
- May 2004

 

 

 


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