WWF is in the process of pushing DNR and
DATCP to adopt rules for double fencing.
DNR Secretary Voices Support For
Double-Fencing Deer Farms
Meyer Would Support More Fencing For Farms
That Test Positive For CWD
Monday,
October 30, 2017, 9:35am
By Danielle Kaeding
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Secretary Dan Meyer said
he would support double-fencing for deer farms to reduce the spread of chronic
wasting disease.
Earlier this year, a stakeholder committee reviewing the state’s
CWD response plan recommended double-fencing farms where deer test positive among
other actions to prevent the disease's spread.
The former state lawmaker from Eagle River said in an interview
Thursday at Gov. Scott Walker’s Northern Economic Summit that he would support
double-fencing as one way to protect the wild deer herd from CWD.
"In my area, chronic wasting has not been found in the wild
deer herd, but in Three Lakes at a deer farm it’s been found," he said.
"So, obviously, you put in the double-fencing to try to protect the
nose-to-nose contact from deer on the outside."
Rick Ewert, president of the Wisconsin Commercial Deer and Elk
Farmer’s Association, said it’s unclear how the disease spreads and more
research needs to be done on CWD. The association represents mostly elk
farmers, but its members also own deer farms. Some deer farmers have opposed
double-fencing farms because of the economic investment required and additional
regulation on what they say is already a highly regulated industry.
"We don’t want to spread CWD. We don’t want disease. We want
a healthy wild deer population," Ewert, said. "You know, it’s not an
either/or thing. We’re just trying to make a living farming."
Ewert said they want to work with the state on solutions to
prevent the disease's spread among captive or wild deer. He said he would
support double-fencing for deer farms to protect captive deer from CWD in the
wild herd if the disease has been proven to spread through nose-to-nose
contact.
Studies of rodents have shown the disease may be spread through
nose-to-nose contact, but a 2012 Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention study said effects haven’t been
studied on deer. Prions or disease-causing agents in infected deer are shed
through mucous membranes, as well as blood, urine, saliva and feces. CWD is
believed to be spread directly through those pathways or indirectly through
soil, food or water.
There are 387 registered deer farms in Wisconsin, according to
the most recent figures from the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade
and Consumer Protection. The department reports 16 farms have tested
positive for CWD since 2001.
DNR staff plan to make recommendations on its CWD plan before
the Natural Resources Board in December.
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