Southwest Colorado gets first deer infected with wasting disease

It’s the first, Parks and Wildlife says
A mule deer looks up from a field of dead sunflowers north of Mancos in this 2010 photo. Colorado Parks and Wildlife has reported its first case of chronic wasting disease in Southwestern Colorado.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife says that it has found a deer that was infected with chronic wasting disease just east of Montrose, the first time that an infected deer has been found in Southwestern Colorado, a state Parks and Wildlife official said on Tuesday.

The deer, found last spring, died on private property, Joe Lewandowski, of the southwest region of Colorado Parks and Wildlife, said in a news release. It was found in Game Management Unit 65.

The disease was confirmed by Colorado State University’s veterinary lab on the Western Slope, he said.

Wasting disease has been present in northern Colorado, for many years. It has also been found on the plains and in some areas of central Colorado. It is a neurological disease found in deer, elk and moose in North America that kills the infected animal. The disease attacks the brains of the animals and causes them to become emaciated and uncoordinated.

Studies by state and federal public health officials have found no relationship between wasting disease and human health problems. However, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment and the Colorado Parks and Wildlife advise hunters to take precautions when handling deer, elk, or moose carcasses.

Hunters in GMUs 62, 64 and 65 who harvest any deer this fall will be able to have the animals tested at no charge by Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Anyone who picks up a road kill deer in these units also can have the animal tested at no charge. These GMUs are those located around the city of Montrose.

To date, CWD has been found in 77 of the Colorado’s 186 game management units. Hunters who harvest deer, elk or moose in any other GMU in the state can submit their animals for testing for a $25 fee.

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