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Showing posts with the label thinning herd

CWD Risks from Field-Dressed Deer That Look Healthy

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  Even “healthy-looking” deer can be infected with CWD and carry prions. Here’s how field dressing spreads CWD across neighborhoods, soil, and scavengers. At first glance, a deer may appear healthy alert posture, glossy coat, no visible symptoms. But beneath that surface, it could be carrying Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) , a fatal neurological illness caused by prions: misfolded proteins that resist breakdown and remain infectious in the environment for years.  This article explores what happens when a field-dressed deer is left exposed on city land, or private property that allowed bowhunters. How that decision can trigger a chain reaction of contamination, scavenger behavior, and predator attraction. Readers will learn how prions spread, which species act as unexpected vectors, and why containment not just herd thinning is essential for responsible wildlife management in urban zones like Joplin, Missouri.   Prion Contamination: What Happens When a Carcass Is Left B...

Joplin’s Deer Hunt Can’t Stop CWD—Prions Spread Through Soil

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Joplin’s urban hunting ordinance, passed in June 2025, claims that thinning the herd will help stop the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD). But that premise falls apart under scientific scrutiny.  CWD is caused by prions misfolded proteins that are not only resistant to heat and sterilization, but also capable of binding to soil and remaining infectious for years. These prions don’t vanish when a deer is removed. They persist in the environment, especially in wooded corridors and feeding zones. CWD is in soil and plants.  Prions most likely enter soil via excretion or from the carcasses of infected animals… interactions with clay minerals do little to reduce prion potency. Unless the city plans to excavate every wooded acre and incinerate the topsoil at 900°F, thinning the herd won’t stop the spread. It might reduce visible deer, but it does nothing to eliminate the prions already embedded in the landscape. “CWD prions remain infectious even after thorough cooking a...

CWD: What Thinning the Herd in Joplin MO Doesn’t Fix

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    When Joplin’s city council approved its urban bow hunting ordinance in June 2025, one of the stated goals was to “reduce the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD)” among the local deer population. Council members cited similar programs in Branson, Columbia, and Springfield as successful models. But the science and the field evidence tell a different story.   Watercolor image created by Susang6 using AI technology  What Is CWD? Chronic Wasting Disease is a fatal neurological illness affecting deer, elk, and moose. It’s caused by misfolded proteins called prions , which slowly degrade the brain and body. Symptoms include weight loss, confusion, drooling, and eventual death. There is no cure , and prions can persist in soil and water for years. What Joplin’s Ordinance Claims The city’s urban hunting page states that the ordinance aims to: Minimize deer-vehicle collisions Reduce property damage Reduce the spread of CWD Councilman Mark Farnha...