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Yahoo
13-02-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
Indiana bill takes aim at chronic wasting disease, but critics fear plan will hurt wild deer
A state lawmaker's proposal aimed at protecting Indiana's wild white-tailed deer from a fatal disease is drawing support from deer farmers, but has many hunters and wildlife advocates concerned. House Bill 1417, filed by Rep. Robert Morris, R-Fort Wayne, would create a pilot program to combat Chronic Wasting Disease by testing deer and looking for certain genetic markers that create a higher resiliency to the fatal disease. It also would require the state's Board of Animal Health and Department of Natural Resources to create a program to 'enhance the genetic durability of Indiana's white-tail deer population.' The bill passed its initial committee hearing but faces a Feb. 17 deadline for approval by the full House before it is sent to the Senate. It's unclear if the bill will make the deadline. The goal of the proposed project is to selectively breed deer with genetic markers that appear to provide more resiliency to CWD, effectively letting deer with infected with the disease live longer. 'With the newly collected data," Morris said, "the state will be better informed and better able to address (chronic wasting disease) in the future.' Where the discussion gets dicey is over the concept of releasing those new, genetically modified deer to mate with white-tailed deer in the wild. The bill initially would have required DNR to release the deer with better resiliency to CWD into the wild, but the language — and directive — was dialed back at a committee hearing in late January to make releases optional rather than mandatory. Still, the approach is concerning to Catherine Appling-Pooler, director of policy for the National Deer Association. She said the organization is not opposed to genetic research in deer, but the Indiana bill is putting the cart before the horse. 'We don't support the release of captive deer into the wild,' Appling-Pooler said. 'That's not part of CWD management recommendations.' The bill sounds great on paper, she said, but a deeper examination of the language causes concern and CWD management should not be forced through legislation. 'By mentioning the release of captive deer, it seems to me like the conclusion has been drawn before the research has been done,' Appling-Pooler said. 'The last time I checked, that's not how it works.' Chronic wasting disease is a terminally fatal illness brought on by abnormal proteins — known as prions — in deer, elk and moose. The abnormal proteins can gather in an animal's central nervous and lymphatic systems and cause degeneration, or 'wasting-away' death, according to the USDA. There are no cures or vaccines for the disease, and infected deer can spread the disease through saliva, feces and urine even before appearing sick. The abnormal proteins can stick to the soil and plants and remain infectious for years, according to the Cornell Wildlife Health Lab. Indiana documented its first case of chronic wasting disease last April during deer season in LaGrange County. The infected deer likely crossed into the state from either Michigan or Ohio, according Chris Smith, deputy director of DNR. Morris said HB1417 would help Indiana establish a baseline for its deer population by collecting more data. It also establishes rules for the pilot program to make sure it works best for the state. Chris Seabury, a veterinary professor at Texas A&M University, testified during a House Natural Resources committee hearing. Seabury said he has worked with prion diseases for 25 years and developed a system that scores deer based on how resistant they were to CWD. The scores can help selectively breed deer that can live longer with CWD. Seabury said he and his colleagues used this system to successfully clean up a captive deer breeding operation suffering from CWD. Since then, Texas and Oklahoma have also tried this system on wild deer populations. Gathering data on Indiana's deer population is imperative, Seabury said. There is, however, no next step toward combating CWD and this bill would provide Indiana with a way to manage the disease. Smith, the deputy DNR director, said one of the department's main concerns is the cost of testing. Each test will cost $75, which does not include the staff time to collect the samples. DNR would require several thousand tests to get a genetic baseline. Deer farmers in Indiana testified in support of the bill during hearing, but hunters and wildlife advocates remained opposed. Buck Fever: Trophy deer industry linked to disease, costs taxpayers millions Gene Hopkins with the Indiana Sportsman's Roundtable told state lawmakers the health of the state's wild deer herd and the preservation of wild heritage genetics is important and opposed the bill. 'The Indiana deer herd is the envy of the Midwest and probably the nation,' Hopkins said. 'We don't want to risk what we have spent all these years building.' Dan Borrit, executive director of the Indiana Wildlife Federation, told IndyStar there is no clear science that shows selective breeding prevents death when a deer has chronic wasting disease. 'Living longer sounds great, but if you are still being infected and living longer, you are further able to spread this highly contagious disease throughout the population,' Borrit said. States like Pennsylvania, where estimates show there's about a 75% occurrence of CWD in deer, might be better suited for this kind of project, Borrit said. 'In a state like Indiana where we have only this one instance documented in the wild, why would you risk spreading that disease further throughout the herd?' Borrit said. Matt Wright, executive director at the Conservation Coalition of Oklahoma, said science at this time does not back these releases into the wild. Oklahoma passed a nearly identical bill last year and is on track to begin releases into the wild. Wright said his organization did not support the Oklahoma legislation because it involved the state's wild deer population. For now, he said, that work should remain in the lab. 'We have no problem with research to beat CWD,' Wright said. 'But if you do release these deer into the wild population, there is no turning that back. They are out there.' IndyStar's environmental reporting project is made possible through the generous support of the nonprofit Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust. Karl Schneider is an IndyStar environment reporter. You can reach him at Follow him on BlueSky @ This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Critics: Plan to combat CWD could put Indiana's wild deer at risk
Yahoo
30-01-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
Nation's second-largest egg producer hit by bird flu as virus spreads across the US
The nation's second-largest egg producer has been hit by bird flu. The Indiana-based Rose Acre Farms said that its Seymour egg farm recently tested positive for the virus, and that workers there had begun to notice deaths over the weekend. They sent out samples to be tested as 'quickly as possible,' and implemented further biosecurity steps to their protocol. 'Unfortunately, we have been previously affected by bird flu, and we know the necessary steps to mitigate further spread,' Rose Acre Farms said in a series of posts on social media. Now, the farm is working with the state's Board of Animal Health and the state veterinarian on best practices to combat the risk of spread to other birds. It is continuing to monitor its other facilities in seven states. The announcement comes amid concerns about skyrocketing egg prices tied to mass cullings of flocks exposed to H5N1 bird flu. The Department of Agriculture has predicted that prices would jump another 20 percent this year, and recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that the average cost of a dozen grade-A large eggs rose to $4.15 last December from $2.51 in December 2023. Concerns about pricing come as the spread of the virus continues to spark concern across the country. On Thursday, Massachusetts officials said that evidence suggests the virus is 'widespread' in the state, and is 'likely present even in places where there has not been a confirmed positive.' Bird flu killed dozens of geese in Ohio and a more rare strain was recently found on a duck farm in California. Minnesota said this week that it would start testing milk for bird flu on dairy farms. The Biden administration had ordered more testing during its final days and invested more than $300 million toward monitoring and preparedness. How the Trump administration will respond to outbreaks largely remains a mystery, although its halt of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Weekly Scientific Report has stalled some related research, according to KFF Health News. A spokesperson for the agency told the outlet that there was a 'short pause.' Still, the agency has been instructed to stop working with the World Health Organization, which coordinates the global response to health emergencies. When asked about bird flu during his confirmation hearing on Wednesday, Health and Human Services Department Secretary nominee Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., told senators that he intends to devote the appropriate resources to preventing pandemics. Kennedy has promoted raw milk, which has been tied to exposure to the virus. He's also questioned moves to get a bird flu vaccine and said that bird flu is 'notoriously harmless to humans.' There have been dozens of cases in 10 states confirmed in the U.S. since then, including one death. Of the cases reported in the Western Pacific Region from January 2003 through this past September, the World Health Organization said that there was a fatality rate of 54 percent.
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The Independent
30-01-2025
- Health
- The Independent
Nation's second-largest egg producer hit by bird flu as virus spreads across the US
The nation's second-largest egg producer has been hit by bird flu. The Indiana-based Rose Acre Farms said that its Seymour egg farm recently tested positive for the virus, and that workers there had begun to notice deaths over the weekend. They sent out samples to be tested as 'quickly as possible,' and implemented further biosecurity steps to their protocol. 'Unfortunately, we have been previously affected by bird flu, and we know the necessary steps to mitigate further spread,' Rose Acre Farms said in a series of posts on social media. Now, the farm is working with the state's Board of Animal Health and the state veterinarian on best practices to combat the risk of spread to other birds. It is continuing to monitor its other facilities in seven states. The announcement comes amid concerns about skyrocketing egg prices tied to mass cullings of flocks exposed to H5N1 bird flu. The Department of Agriculture has predicted that prices would jump another 20 percent this year, and recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that the average cost of a dozen grade-A large eggs rose to $4.15 last December from $2.51 in December 2023. Concerns about pricing come as the spread of the virus continues to spark concern across the country. On Thursday, Massachusetts officials said that evidence suggests the virus is 'widespread' in the state, and is 'likely present even in places where there has not been a confirmed positive.' Bird flu killed dozens of geese in Ohio and a more rare strain was recently found on a duck farm in California. Minnesota said this week that it would start testing milk for bird flu on dairy farms. The Biden administration had ordered more testing during its final days and invested more than $300 million toward monitoring and preparedness. How the Trump administration will respond to outbreaks largely remains a mystery, although its halt of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Weekly Scientific Report has stalled some related research, according to KFF Health News. A spokesperson for the agency told the outlet that there was a 'short pause.' Still, the agency has been instructed to stop working with the World Health Organization, which coordinates the global response to health emergencies. When asked about bird flu during his confirmation hearing on Wednesday, Health and Human Services Department Secretary nominee Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., told senators that he intends to devote the appropriate resources to preventing pandemics. Kennedy has p romoted raw milk, which has been tied to exposure to the virus. He's also questioned moves to get a bird flu vaccine and said that bird flu is 'notoriously harmless to humans.' There have been dozens of cases in 10 states confirmed in the U.S. since then, including one death. Of the cases reported in the Western Pacific Region from January 2003 through this past September, the World Health Organization said that there was a fatality rate of 54 percent.