DNR announces detection of chronic
wasting disease in White Tail deer in Ford County
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[May 02, 2024]
Chronic
wasting disease has been detected in Ford County, expanding the
geographic presence of the infection in free-ranging deer
populations in northern Illinois, the Illinois Department of Natural
Resources (IDNR) announced today.
Chronic wasting disease, commonly referred to as CWD, is an
always-fatal neurological disease that threatens the long-term
health of white-tailed deer in Illinois. First documented in
Illinois in 2002 near Roscoe, CWD has been detected in 21 counties
across the northern edge and northeastern portions of Illinois, as
far south as Kankakee and Livingston counties.
CWD was detected – and confirmed through diagnostic
testing – in Ford County in mid-March from a suspect-deer exhibiting
symptoms consistent with CWD infection. Other recent cases of CWD
were documented previously in Bureau and Lee counties during 2023
and 2022, respectively. Affected counties now include Boone, Bureau,
Carroll, Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Ford, Grundy, Jo Daviess, Kane,
Kankakee, Kendall, Lake, LaSalle, Lee, Livingston, McHenry, Ogle,
Stephenson, Will and Winnebago.
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Wildlife biologists with IDNR
will be available to discuss current management strategies and
answer questions about CWD in public meetings anticipated to
occur later this year. Meeting dates and locations will be
published at an appropriate time. Landowners, hunters and
interested citizens are encouraged to attend.
Illinois is a national leader in managing and slowing the spread
of chronic wasting disease. IDNR’s 20-year program is a model
for other states. CWD
management is an important issue that affects the overall health of
the Illinois deer herd. Wildlife biologists and disease specialists
with IDNR, as well as multi-agency partners, have actively worked to
slow the spread of CWD since it was first documented in Illinois.
Current management efforts include encouraging hunter harvest and
testing of deer in counties with confirmed cases of CWD, targeted
removal in CWD infection zones to slow the spread of the disease,
and ongoing statewide CWD surveillance in counties where CWD has not
been detected. In addition, IDNR engages in outreach efforts to
raise public awareness about CWD and its potential long-term impact
on deer hunting in Illinois. Go online for additional information on
CWD management.
For more information about these detections or about CWD, contact
Chris Jacques, wildlife disease program manager at chris.jacques@illinois.gov.
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