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Mule Deer threatened by axis & fallow deer disease

ardrhi

Member
Joined
Feb 14, 2012
Messages
156
Location
Arimo, Idaho
This will hit the papers tomorrow if word isn't out yet.

Deer Killed to Control Exotic Louse Infestation
With help from USDA Wildlife Service, Idaho Fish and Game killed 60 mule deer in Riggins to help stop the spread an infestation of exotic lice.
In March 2009, a male mule deer about nine months old suffering from hair loss was reported in Riggins. Officials who responded found the deer dead and sent it to Idaho’s Wildlife Health Lab for a necropsy. The animal was emaciated, with evidence of pneumonia and thousands of lice on the body – an exotic louse not previously reported in Idaho.
The lice were first detected in the western U.S. following translocations of fallow deer and axis deer to the West Coast more than 40 years ago.
Infestation causes skin irritation and excessive scratching, resulting in hair loss. Hair loss is most common in late winter and early spring, and the affected deer may die as a result.
While an infestation of the louse may cause in the death of deer, it has no known health concerns for humans or domestic animals.
Idaho Fish and Game’s investigation has found the number of infested deer in Riggins has grown to about 75 to 80 percent. Attempts to control or eliminate the lice and to prevent their spread to adjacent deer populations include reducing deer numbers.
Using Wildlife Services was the most expedient means of reducing deer numbers in Riggins. Public hunts would not have been effective because of private property access and safe-fire zone issues.
Meat from the animals is being processed and will be turned over to local area food banks.
Fish and Game will continue to monitor for the exotic louse in the area and will consider other management options should infestations continue.
Wildlife veterinarians also hope to learn more about the health of the affected deer, and about how the lice spread. They hope to develop a program to prevent or treat future infestations.
For information about the exotic louse go to http://wdfw.wa.gov/conservation/health/hair_loss/index.html.
 
I sure hope they can stop it!

Our blacktail populations have been impacted pretty hard from Hair Loss Syndrome since the deer farms in Washington state got things started here. It is really sad to watch how it takes them down.

As far as I know this is the first time it has been found east of the Cascade Mountains.
 
Only the healthy offspring of exotics kept in zoo like conditions were ever permitted out of zoo-like conditions in Texas. That might have been a good policy to follow in other places. It definitely might be a good policy to follow in the future.
 
mtlion- there are plenty of game farms left in Montana, just not hunting operations. I was west of Kalispell a week ago near Kila and watched a wild cow elk touch noses with a fenced in cow elk. The fence was plenty high enough to keep the game farm elk from escaping but there was nothing to keep the "domesticated" elk from interacting with wild elk through the fence. I spoke with a few local hunters and they claimed to see this happen quite often. Scary stuff for sure.
 

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