I see assertions that support my last post.Oak, just curious what do you see when you read the first sentence of paragraph 3 and then last sentence from paragraph 6, from the report you mention?
Also what do you think about the stance of Alaska fish and game? Because my reading is that there is not enough or any indication for them to continue spending money on the idea of camelids spreading disease to wild sheep.
Many people are also critical of WSF role in writing the BC report without appropriate scientific backing for their assertions, as I believe it had been pulled from the WSF website for this reason.
The AK F&G took the stance they thought was appropriate.
The report is still on the WSF site. I'm not sure about the assertions you are referencing. The report (as you pointed out) concludes there is no evidence that transmission has occurred between camelids and wild sheep. It notes that camelids can carry pathogens that are detrimental to wild sheep populations. It concludes that separation is appropriate until better science is available.
Just because a pathogen already exists in the environment doesn't mean that there is no risk from introducing livestock that carries the same pathogen. For example, many, many bighorn sheep herds in the West test positive for the Mycoplasma ovipneumniae bacteria, but can still suffer catastrophic die-offs when a new strain of the bacteria is introduced. That's pretty common knowledge.