F&W Board Votes to Ban Natural Deer Urine Lures

 

VERMONT FISH & WILDLIFE Press Release

For Immediate Release: April 28, 2015 Media Contacts: Commissioner Louis Porter, 802-828-1454 Scott Darling, 802-786-3862; Mark Scott, 802-777-4217

MONTPELIER, Vt. – The Vermont Fish & Wildlife Board has voted to ban the possession and use by hunters of natural lures based on deer urine or other fluids beginning in 2016. By doing so the board hopes to reduce the threat of chronic wasting disease (CWD) entering the state, which has the potential to devastate Vermont’s deer herd.

The disease is currently found in 23 states and two Canadian provinces. Ontario, Arizona and some areas of Pennsylvania prohibit the use of such lures. CWD is 100 percent fatal in infected individuals, and infection levels can approach 50 percent in adult bucks.

“The Fish & Wildlife Department fully supports the board in this important step to protect Vermont’s deer herd,” said Mark Scott, director of wildlife for the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department. “This rule still allows hunters to use synthetic lures which pose no threat to the herd.”

CWD can be spread in deer urine, feces and saliva, and deer may not show symptoms of the disease for several years after being infected. CWD can be deposited in soil and remain infectious for decades. The form of the disease found in sheep has been infectious18 years after being deposited in soil, according to wildlife veterinarian Dr. Walter Cottrell.

Dr. Cottrell has worked closely with the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department as a contract wildlife veterinarian since retirement as wildlife veterinarian for Pennsylvania. He presented on the science of CWD to the Fish & Wildlife Board at their April 22 meeting.

“Because of its long incubation period of months to years, when this disease arrives in a new place, it can potentially be there for a long time before it is detected,” said Dr. Cottrell. “And once the disease is there the genie is out of the bottle. Based on the experiences of the affected states and provinces it never leaves.”

Dr. Cottrell outlined how quickly the disease can spread among deer populations. In Wyoming, 12 percent of the mule deer population was infected in 1997, while 47 percent of the population is infected today.

According to Dr. Cottrell, there currently is no test for CWD on living animals – tests are performed on deer only after they die. Deer are able to contract CWD and spread the disease for up to a year and possibly longer before they demonstrate any clinical signs of the disease. Deer urine lures are not tested for CWD, nor is it possible to track and recall bottles of lure that have been sold from a facility that later tests positive for the disease.

Captive deer populations have been implicated in the spread of CWD in several states. While many captive deer facilities claim that their facilities are ‘CWD-free,’ urine lures from different sources are commonly mixed so hunters are unable to tell the origin of their product. The first case of CWD in Pennsylvania was recorded in a captive deer facility that was considered ‘CWD-free” and was selling deer urine lures online, according to a letter to the board from Dr. Krysten Schuler, a researcher the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine.

“Pennsylvania officials have been unable to trace the source of CWD in their captive cervid industry, nor has the source been determined for CWD-positive facilities detected in the last five years in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Missouri, Iowa, Utah, and Alberta, Canada,” said Dr. Schuler in a letter to Vermont Fish & Wildlife. “Once CWD is established in wild cervids, no state or province has been able to control or eliminate it despite monumental efforts and expense. Therefore, implementing strong preventative measures is the only tool available to combat this disease.”

Dr. Cottrell agreed, saying that banning natural deer urine lures is one of the few things the board can do to prevent the spread of CWD into Vermont.

Dr. Nancy Matthews performed research on CWD in Wisconsin for 13 years before taking on the role of Dean of University of Vermont’s Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources. In a letter to the Fish & Wildlife Board, Dr. Matthews also expressed her support for the science behind the ban.

“Based on my personal research and an understanding of the existing scientific literature, I fully endorse the proposed ban,” wrote Dr. Matthews. “Simply put, it is in the best interest of the deer and moose populations in the state.”

One more board vote will follow in the coming months. The proposed ban would become effective in 2016.

 

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