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Threat of chronic wasting disease moves closer to Yellowstone National Park

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YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK –  Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal brain disorder that can severely reduce herds of deer, elk, and moose. Now, it’s on the doorstep of Yellowstone National Park.

Last month, a mule deer hit by a car in Grand Teton National Park, just south of Yellowstone, tested positive for the disease. There is no known cure for the malady, which can live in the soil and be transmitted to animals for years.

It could be bad news for Yellowstone, which has two big drawing cards: thermal features and wildlife.

Park officials say there’s no certainty that CWD will devastate popular elk and deer herds in the park and reclusive moose populations. But Montana’s Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks reports that after the disease struck in Colorado, mule deer populations decreased by 45 percent over 20 years.

In the same report, FWP states Wyoming saw a 21 percent decrease in mule deer herds after infection there.

If similar population declines were to be experienced in Yellowstone National Park, visitors would almost certainly notice a change.

“It is concerning to Yellowstone and Yellowstone biologists,” said park spokesperson Morgan Warthin. “Much so that we do have a plan in place.”

A summary of that plan can be found on the park’s website. It details everything from increased testing and observation of animals once the disease appears in the park, all the way to killing and removing infected animals.

Recently, visitor Nancy Andrew of Perrysburg, Ohio trudged through the snow along Soda Butte Creek, east of the Lamar Valley in the northeastern part of the park. She had just finished taking photos of several moose that were grazing on willows along the creek.

“That’s one of the two winter animals that I want to see that I haven’t seen,” she said.

Andrew said seeing animals in the park is the top draw for her and she’s well aware of the danger posed by CWD, saying it’s important for the park to act quickly once the disease is encountered.

“Because once it starts, there’s nothing that we can do about it,” she said.

In nearby Grand Teton National Park, spokeswoman Denise German said officials there are on the lookout for the disease.

“We’ve been doing some intensive surveillance, which is basically testing animals,” she said. “And that’s testing the road kill, the dead animals that we find throughout the park.”

While testing road and hunter-killed animals is an effective way to monitor the progression of the disease, spotting it in live animals is much more difficult.

Montana FWP biologist Dr. Emily Almberg said it’s difficult to get in front of the disease.

“Symptoms do not appear until an animal is in the terminal stages of the disease,” she said.

She added that makes it much more difficult to manage an outbreak.

Yellowstone spokeswoman Warthin said the park is trying to get ahead of CWD by using some new tracking techniques.

“We’re also monitoring radio-collared elk and mule deer to understand their movement, to be able to anticipate the possibility of the spread into the park,” she said.

Once CWD gets into Yellowstone, and many think it’s inevitable, the park’s plan moves up a notch. There will be more testing and the public will be asked to help.

“We always encourage visitors too to let us know when they’re seeing an animal that may not look very well,” said Denise German at Grand Teton.

Besides increased monitoring, the plan for Yellowstone is to dispose of infected carcasses as quickly as possible because the disease is easily transmitted to other deer, elk, or moose that may visit the site.

One of the ways the park plans to do that is to move diseased corpses to areas where predators will quickly consume the remains.

The Yellowstone report states: “Selective predation and scavenging could remove a greater proportion of CWD-infected animals than culling or harvest and dilute environmental contamination and suppress CWD prevalence.”

The park is also prepared to cull infected animals. Once CWD levels infect five percent of male and two-to-three percent of female animals, the report said: “We would consider the science and technology available at the time to decide whether to implement actions to maintain prevalence below these thresholds, which may include practices such as selective culling.”

But all of this is expected to play out in slow motion because the disease progresses steadily, though slowly. The report said: “We will measure CWD prevalence over 5- to 10- year horizons given the slow progression of CWD epidemics.”

Scientists say CWD can remain at low levels for decades, though it has moved more quickly through deer and elk populations in some areas.

Officials say there is no evidence CWD poses a risk to humans, but the Yellowstone report recommends against human consumption of meat from an infected animal and meat from any infected animals found in the park will not be donated to food banks.

Yellowstone is also taking steps to keep contamination out. Yellowstone prohibits: “The transport of heads and spinal cords from deer, elk, or moose through the park if they were harvested in a state or province with CWD diagnosed in their wildlife populations.”

Currently, those states and provinces include Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio (hunting preserve), Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Alberta, and Saskatchewan.

If Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado is an example, then it could be decades before there are noticeable population declines once CWD is detected in the park. There’s also a chance that Yellowstone’s unique mix of large predators and prey will actually protect the park from a disease that can be devastating to some species.

-Reported by John Sherer/MTN News