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Message
2 more CWD positives Marshall County Mississippi
Posted on 1/12/19 at 9:36 am
Posted on 1/12/19 at 9:36 am
2 more CWD cases found in Marshall County Mississippi.
LINK
LINK to MDWFP CWD map
The only thing on the map that doesn’t make sense are the two in Issaquena being so far from the hotspot in south Tennessee/north Mississippi.
LINK
LINK to MDWFP CWD map
The only thing on the map that doesn’t make sense are the two in Issaquena being so far from the hotspot in south Tennessee/north Mississippi.
This post was edited on 1/12/19 at 9:48 am
Posted on 1/12/19 at 10:02 am to feverish
quote:the dots will be connected sooner rather than later
The only thing on the map that doesn’t make sense are the two in Issaquena being so far from the hotspot in south Tennessee/north Mississippi.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 10:08 am to oleyeller
CWD has been blown way out of proportion. We lose a hell of a lot more on roadways then we do to disease.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 10:08 am to feverish
I had an idea and you guys tell me if it is possible or dumb because I have never heard it proposed. Could scientist create and introduce something in the feed that could cause a reaction in CWD positive deer that could make a visual change in the deer? Example in my mind would be the reaction could cause a change of coat color or even coat sheds like when giving a cancer patient chemotherapy. This would make CWD positive deer viewable and they could be targetted and removed.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 10:48 am to feverish
It's getting a little scary. It will be interesting to see how this affects hunting deer in the future.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 10:55 am to Smell the crawfish
Colorado has been dealing with this longer than any other state. Deer and elk hunting are doing very well there.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 11:01 am to feverish
I can’t help but think these Mississippi and Tennessee CWD deer are the result of escaped, imported high-fence deer. There is no natural progression from a CWD area to Issaquena and Marshall County, Mississippi or the Tennessee counties.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 11:17 am to mtb010
I don't have a worry about CWD killing off the herd. I do worry about the possibility of an eventual jump to humans. If that occurs anywhere just once, deer hunting (and value of hunting land) will be crushed. Processors will not be able to process deer anymore for worries of contamination with other meat sources.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 11:21 am to TamminardTiger
It's only a matter of time.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 11:22 am to TamminardTiger
What if jumps to humans, then becomes transmissible between us, as it is in deer or as scrapie is in sheep?
The real life Walking Dead.
The real life Walking Dead.
Posted on 1/12/19 at 11:25 am to TamminardTiger
Colorado saying it is manageable takes the edge off a little. Still scary. Plus we have warmer winters and more tropical climate that stands to reason it would spread worse.
If MWDF was smart they would video a 140’ buck with CWD say it is in MS and broadcast it everywhere. Private donations would skyrocket and the Bone Collector-should have waited till next year- Mafia will lose their minds.
If MWDF was smart they would video a 140’ buck with CWD say it is in MS and broadcast it everywhere. Private donations would skyrocket and the Bone Collector-should have waited till next year- Mafia will lose their minds.
This post was edited on 1/12/19 at 11:27 am
Posted on 1/12/19 at 11:35 am to DownSouthJukin
After nearly 50 years since the disease was first reported, no one is sure how it even spreads. Thus the skip areas on the map. Is is in the soil, air, water? Carried by insects, birds or other vectors? No one knows. Also It is caused from a prion that may be near impossible to destroy by standard methods of sterilization. Right now it's not an issue to man unless it makes that transmission jump. If it ever does, then deer hunting (and elk) would change dramatically.
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