CWD confirmed at National Elk Refuge

WGFD moves forward with supplemental feeding program

Kristen A. Schmitt
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Wyoming elk feeding grounds cwd h1

The first case of chronic wasting disease (CWD) was confirmed in a cow elk last week after a hunter harvested the animal on Dec. 2 in Grand Teton National Park. It took two weeks to receive the lab results, but the lymph node extracted from the elk tested positive for the fatal disease, resulting in concern from wildlife disease experts since the elk was killed only a few miles away from the National Elk Refuge, according to the Jackson Hole Daily.

“This is not going to be good, that’s my gut feeling,” said Wildlife Disease Supervisor Hank Edwards. “How bad it’s going to be? I don’t know.”

The controversial feedgrounds provide supplemental alfalfa pellets for elk during severe winters and, according to Jackson Hole Daily, roughly 20,000 animals congregate each year on 23 state and federal feedgrounds in Wyoming. However, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department (WGFD) doesn’t plan on halting the supplemental feeding program despite the presence of CWD. Prior to this recent positive case, the only CWD-positive elk was harvested in Hunt Unit 66 – though the disease has previously been found in mule deer and moose.

“We’ve been speculating when it would arrive for a long time,” WGFD Regional Supervisor Brad Hovinga said. “It’s extremely difficult to predict.”

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And it’s also difficult to predict how fast the disease will infiltrate elk populations within Jackson Hole and the rest of the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, despite modeling completed by wildlife scientists. Some peer-reviewed research says CWD prevalence “could reach 10% within five years” and predictions are worse for other areas in the Rocky Mountain National Park where scientists predict “populations [of elk] decline once prevalence tops 13%,” according to the Jackson Hole Daily.

Based upon this information, critics don’t want the supplemental feeding programs to continue.

“We know what’s going to happen,” said Connie Wilbert, the Sierra Club’s Wyoming Chapter director.. “The idea that they’re going to be feeding this coming winter is crazy and totally insane. If this isn’t a wake-up call, I don’t know what is.”

The Wyoming Outfitters and Guides Association (WOGA) has similar views.

“It would be a fool’s errand to think that it’s not going to go through all the big game units in Wyoming, eventually,” said Sy Gilliland of WOGA. “Anybody who’s dealt with it knows that.”

To address the issue, WGFD has updated its CWD management plan and is currently collected comments on how to best manage this particular issue.


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2 Comments

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vitaliy kroychik

vitaliy kroychik

member

1/4/2021, 2:06:37 AM

The fact that Sierra club is still regarded as a serious environmental organization is laughable, even more laughable that this clueless “journalist” is citing them, but neglecting to mention that they have SUED to halt the program to begin with. Perhaps noting that would be an important part of the story. Maybe letting folks know that the Sierra club has gone from an organization that works on environmental issues to a political activist organization (whose points include open borders, reducing hunting, and pro wolf reintroduction in CO) would be even more relevant to the story.

Wesley Collins

Wesley Collins

insider

1/3/2021, 4:06:28 PM

seems like the cattleman associations are making wildife decisions in Wyoming if the outfitters and guides are against it

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