Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Arkansas Outdoors

- BRYAN HENDRICKS

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission continued its Chronic Wasting Disease Tour before a standing-room-only crowd Tuesday at the Janet Huckabee Nature Center in Fort Smith. The next and last scheduled stop on the tour will be at 6 p.m. today at Cross Church in Springdale.

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission continued its Chronic Wasting Disease Tour before a standing-room-only crowd Tuesday at the Janet Huckabee Nature Center in Fort Smith.

The next and last scheduled stop on this tour will be at 6 p.m. today at Cross Church in Springdale.

Cory Gray, the Game and Fish Commission’s chief of research, led the six-piece a cappella outfit in a tight, well-structured performanc­e that featured Dr. Jennifer Ballard, the AGFC’s veterinari­an, on lead vocals. Ralph Meeker, Wes Wright and Mark Hutchings supplied backup vocals. Meeker is the commission’s deer program coordinato­r. Wright is the elk program coordinato­r and Hutchings is the assistant chief of the wildlife division.

The Fort Smith meeting was considerab­ly different than the 2016 meetings that were held shortly after chronic wasting disease was discovered in deer and elk in Newton County. Those meetings had an atmosphere of shock and dread.

Since then, the Game and Fish Commission has released a free and comprehens­ive flow of informatio­n to the public about chronic wasting disease. The Fort Smith crowd was up to speed on the basics, which enabled the AGFC’s staff to discuss proposed regulation­s designed to slow the spread of the disease to other parts of the state.

Proposed regulation­s include creating a tier-based carcass movement restrictio­n in the CWD management zone. A Tier 1 “red” zone would include Newton, Carroll, Madison and Boone counties. A Tier 2 “orange” zone would include Benton, Crawford, Franklin, Johnson, Logan, Pope, Searcy, Marion, Sebastian, Yell, Washington and Van Buren counties.

The regulation would prohibit moving whole deer carcasses in the red zone to any county outside of the red zone. Whole deer carcasses taken in the orange zone could not be transporte­d to counties where CWD has not been identified.

Audience members queried the panel on a wide range of topics, including protocols for testing deer for chronic wasting disease. One man, age 76, said that he hunts deer to eat, and that two weeks is too long to wait for a test result.

Ballard said the turnaround time for test results will get faster, especially if the Arkansas Livestock and Poultry Commission gets a diagnostic laboratory. Currently, the AGFC sends CWD samples to a lab in Wisconsin.

Another person asked if aggressive use of prescribed burning will destroy infectious proteins, or prions, from the environmen­t and reduce the chance of passive infection.

“Fire has to be very, very hot before it will destroy a prion, and it’s a combinatio­n of pressure and fire,” Ballard said. “The average fire probably is not going to burn a lot of prions.”

Special incinerato­rs are used to destroy CWD-infected tissue, but it might not be enough. Daniel Gadjusek won

the Nobel Prize in physiology in 1976 for his work studying a human prion disease called kuru. That was more than a decade before Dr. Stanley Prusiner coined the term “prion” while studying variant Creutzfeld­t-Jakob Disease. Gadjusek, who died in 2008, said that even the ash of incinerate­d prions is infectious.

Another audience member challenged the panel about the efficacy of regulation­s restrictin­g the use of attractant­s and feeding wildlife. The AGFC prohibits the use of deer urine to attract deer but allows synthetic scent. A CWD-infected buck will pollute a mock scrape made with a synthetic product, he said, which makes synthetic products potentiall­y complicit in spreading the disease.

The same applies to food plots versus corn piles, he added. An infected deer will eat a leaf from a turnip plant, and then turn and eat a leaf from another plant as it meanders across a plot. In this way it will infect a greater area and potentiall­y expose more deer to shed prions from urine, feces and saliva.

“Why are we still baiting?” he asked. “Does harvest outweigh the possibilit­y of spreading this [disease] further?”

Another audience member asked the question that matters most. “This [chronic wasting disease] is never going to stop, so what’s your objective?”

“We have to be adaptive,” Ballard said. “The research is progressin­g, but we’re going to learn a lot more.”

When “Prion” Prusiner won the Nobel Prize in 1997, he predicted a cure before the end of that decade. He now acknowledg­es that a cure is no closer than it was then.

A cure is unlikely to originate with the AGFC, so the only realistic objective is to keep the disease from spreading.

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