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Buck killed in South Texas.
Posted on 11/9/12 at 11:07 pm
Posted on 11/9/12 at 11:07 pm
Problem is no one knows what killed it. This is the third dead Buck they have found on this ranch this season. All found in water with no signs of trauma. Its a friend of a friend thing so I don't know anymore than that.
Posted on 11/9/12 at 11:50 pm to Bleeding purple
Damn shame no one can claim that beautiful buck
Posted on 11/10/12 at 1:38 am to Bleeding purple
Sounds like EHD. It's a deadly disease that has been affecting deer all over the country this year worse than usual. Deer that die of EHD are usually found in/near some kind of big water source. One of the side effects makes them incredibly thirsty. Lots of big deer have been dropping from it in the Midwest and Northeast all summer/early fall. Haven't heard of any major reports from LA or the deep South.
Posted on 11/10/12 at 1:41 am to StringMusic16
Here's what EHD is from Wikipedia:
Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD) is an orbivirus that infects White-tailed Deer in the northeastern and midwestern United States. The virus is transmitted by the Culicoides biting midge. The EHD virus is closely related to the Bluetongue virus and crossreacts with it on many blood tests. The virus has an incubation period of approximately one week, during which the animal may transmit the virus to biting midges. After the development of symptoms (which include internal hemorrhage, weakness, high fever, bruising, and dyspnea) the animal dies within 8 to 36 hours."
Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD) is an orbivirus that infects White-tailed Deer in the northeastern and midwestern United States. The virus is transmitted by the Culicoides biting midge. The EHD virus is closely related to the Bluetongue virus and crossreacts with it on many blood tests. The virus has an incubation period of approximately one week, during which the animal may transmit the virus to biting midges. After the development of symptoms (which include internal hemorrhage, weakness, high fever, bruising, and dyspnea) the animal dies within 8 to 36 hours."
Posted on 11/10/12 at 4:09 am to StringMusic16
Thanks for the info I will pass it on.
Posted on 11/10/12 at 4:37 am to Bleeding purple
That's the same thing the killed 2/3 of the herd along Milk River in Montana
Posted on 11/10/12 at 5:31 am to Bleeding purple
LINK
La deer herd hit hard by ehd. Our lease in EBR is seeing a few dead deer and lots of malnourished deer.
La deer herd hit hard by ehd. Our lease in EBR is seeing a few dead deer and lots of malnourished deer.
Posted on 11/10/12 at 5:35 am to Bleeding purple
WHere Was this at BP????
Posted on 11/10/12 at 9:25 am to BarDTiger81
I would also like to know where this is
Posted on 11/10/12 at 11:52 am to StringMusic16
quote:
The virus has an incubation period of approximately one week, during which the animal may transmit the virus to biting midges. After the development of symptoms (which include internal hemorrhage, weakness, high fever, bruising, and dyspnea) the animal dies within 8 to 36 hours."
We've had a few episodes of this here in Virginia, also. If memory serves me right, EHD has a correlation with drought conditions. Water levels drop and these midges reproduce in the exposed mud and infect the deer when they come to drink.
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