Most deer breeder operations are not big ranches. They are usually relatively small acreages in comparison.
Gunny456 said:
I have attended many workshops, seminars, conferences on CWD. I have asked the question many times to "experts" of…if the prions are in the soils to such an extent then why is it not spread by mud on tires of trucks, trailers, shoes etc. I always get crickets and never an explanation.
In my opinion, which means little, is we know as much about CWD now as we did about Covid. There is still a lot to figure out and learn. But we do know it's spread the most from breeder facilities.
If you have a sewage leak into your drinking water the best way to fix it is to fix that leak…not to filter the drinking water.
txags92 said:Gunny456 said:
I have attended many workshops, seminars, conferences on CWD. I have asked the question many times to "experts" of…if the prions are in the soils to such an extent then why is it not spread by mud on tires of trucks, trailers, shoes etc. I always get crickets and never an explanation.
In my opinion, which means little, is we know as much about CWD now as we did about Covid. There is still a lot to figure out and learn. But we do know it's spread the most from breeder facilities.
If you have a sewage leak into your drinking water the best way to fix it is to fix that leak…not to filter the drinking water.
I still wonder how many of the breeders use the same transport trailers to ship their deer to buyers. Seems like an easy vector to expose deer who might have tested negative to leave the property but pop positive a year or two later at the new place. Without a giant autoclave, "disinfection" of the trapping gear and trailers against CWD prions really isn't possible.
Gunny456 said:
If you have a sewage leak into your drinking water the best way to fix it is to fix that leak…not to filter the drinking water.
slammerag said:
Not an expert, but seems deer un-naturally congregating around feeder eating corn out of the dirt has to have some impact with spreading a disease that comes from the dirt. As far as political pressure, folks that buy the deer likely can exert pressure, but TPWD doesn't like deer breeders. They make them test and will kill every animal on the place with a single non-negative. I've heard live testing is un-reliable, but could be wrong. Seems like a slippery slope with govt overreach. Do they ban exotics, do you ban pen raised birds?
Gunny456 said:
Just curious. What places received negative test live tested deer that then showed a positive deer later? I was understanding that the couple of places that that happened on had also previously purchased non tested deer and they really couldn't determine it was brought in by the live tested deer or the non tested deer before.

MouthBQ98 said:
Density. That is it. Breeding facilities have lots of deer in close contact on a small area all the time. Prions build up in the environment at much higher concentration. They are durable and persistent. The close contact amongst animals, and the very high concentration of environmental prions from body fluids and waste vastly increase the odds of the deer in that environment getting infected.
In the wild, the density is far far lower, and not geographically concentrated to one tiny area full of infected animals shedding prions. This means the odds of spreading are extremely low. The wild deer live and die faster than a few infected deer can spread it in natural wild deer densities.
Gunny456 said:
Yea I have seen that. Then perhaps there were two instances because i knew one of the wardens that had knowledge of the case and it was deemed as I stated. However, the details sound very similar.
As I stated in another post, that of all the meetings and seminars, etc. I have attended on CWD, I specifically tried to bring a discussion to bear on if it could be transported by trailers, mud, dirt, plants etc to the "experts". ….only to either get non definitive answers or the admission that they have no data or proof to support it one way or the other.
Funny thing is that after 4 years of not being able to have feeders or such in MO, they basically have said they don't know if helped or not.
Seems stupid that they put all the restrictions on feeders, mineral blocks, mineral distributions etc. but then say food plots are ok. So 30 deer standing in a 40 x 60 food plot …peeing and pooping on the plants and ground is ok.
I'm just waiting for the day they say Texas can't use feeders or mineral blocks, licks etc. and watch the meltdown.

SanAntoneAg said:
Yet another example of why ear tags should be mandatory throughout the lifespan of captive deer in Texas.
OnlyForNow said:
It doesn't come from the dirt, it can be vectored/"stored" in the dirt for years though.
It has to come through/from the animal host.
CWD most likely started as sheep scabies I believe and has morphed into what it is in the cervid population now.
Sort of like parvo can live outside the host for a long time in dirt/soil, then be ingested by a dog and boom, pup's got parvo.
AnScAggie said:SanAntoneAg said:
Yet another example of why ear tags should be mandatory throughout the lifespan of captive deer in Texas.
Truthfully, I think they should be freeze branded. Ear tags are too easy to cut out.
SanAntoneAg said:AnScAggie said:SanAntoneAg said:
Yet another example of why ear tags should be mandatory throughout the lifespan of captive deer in Texas.
Truthfully, I think they should be freeze branded. Ear tags are too easy to cut out.
That would work as well. So long as it's visible so that if, theoretically, my breeder deer are on your property, you can shoot them and get them tested for CWD before you consume them.