Hunting News

Testing confirms 14 CWD positive deer

Testing confirms 14 CWD positive deer

By Iowa Department of Natural Resources

Fourteen tissue samples from wild Iowa deer tested positive for chronic wasting disease, bringing the total deer testing positive in Iowa to 44.

Results are not yet in on follow-up tests for two suspect samples that could raise the total positives for the year to 16.  The deer tissue was collected primarily during the fall from hunter-harvested and roadkill deer.

“The way that this disease moves, these results were not unexpected,” said Todd Bishop, Wildlife bureau chief.

Eight positive deer were confirmed in Allamakee County, four in Clayton County, one (plus two suspected) in Wayne County and, for the first time, one in Dubuque County. The Dubuque County deer was roadkill 2 1/2 miles southeast of the city limits.

“Hunters are doing an excellent job harvesting deer and providing samples in our priority areas, areas where the disease had been confirmed before. We want to slow this down as best we can while still having high quality deer hunting, hoping science can provide some solutions down the road,” Bishop said.

More than 6,800 tissue samples have been collected during the 2018 deer season.

The DNR contacted each hunter whose deer tested positive and offered to collect the meat and any remaining bones and tissue. Hunters turned over the meat in every case. The collected CWD was first confirmed in the Midwest in Wisconsin in 2001 about 75 miles from the Iowa state line, and has since been confirmed in every other state bordering Iowa. The Iowa DNR began monitoring for the disease in 2002 with an emphasis on counties nearest where it was confirmed in the wild and has tested more than 74,000 deer since.

The disease was first confirmed in Iowa near Harpers Ferry in Allamakee County in 2013.

CWD is a neurological disease belonging to the family of diseases known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) or prion diseases.  It attacks the brain of infected deer causing the animal to lose weight, display abnormal behavior, lose body functions and die. It is always fatal to the infected animal.

For more information on CWD in Iowa, click here.

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