News and Updates

< Back
 
Colorado : 13 Elk Caught in Park Test Positive for Disease

Date: April 10, 2008
Source: Rocky Mountain News

Contacts:
Todd Hartman, Rocky Mountain News
Email or 303-954-5048


The first results of a new, live-animal test for chronic wasting disease found that 13 of 117 captured elk in Rocky Mountain National Park were positive.

The results mark the initial fruits of an unprecedented research and population-control project in the park. It was designed, in part, to evaluate the use of a live test for the fatal disease on wild, free-ranging elk. A live test has been in use for deer.

The rate of infection - 11 percent - appears high for elk. Typical disease rates in the wild have hovered closer to 1 percent or 2 percent.

A National Park Service statement said researchers weren't surprised, however, because the park's herd is larger, less migratory and more concentrated than it would be under natural conditions, with hunting and predators to scatter the animals. Such confined conditions make the spread of CWD more likely.

"Research has also shown that elk densities on the core winter range (in the park) are the highest concentrations ever documented for a free-ranging population in the Rocky Mountains," the park service said.

A total of 136 elk were captured from January through mid-March from herds in Moraine Park and Beaver Meadows on the park's east side. Of those, 117 yielded usable tissue for CWD testing. At the time of capture, none of the animals exhibited symptoms of the illness.

The CWD testing is part of a broader effort, also designed to reduce elk numbers in the park and test a new birth-control drug for the animals.

The elk population, unchecked by hunters and wolves, has grown too large for the park to support, ecologists say, leading to overgrazing on willows and aspen, and damaging habitat for other plants and animals.

Elk testing positive for CWD will be among up to 200 a year killed in the park as part of the effort to reduce population to a target herd size of 1,600 to 2,100. Just how many elk are culled per year will depend on annual population surveys and hunter success.


Click these links for more information

National News
Alabama
Alberta
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
International
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Manitoba
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
Saskatchewan
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming


© Chronic Wasting Disease Alliance

Web site development by Pyron Technologies, Inc.