The Columbus Dispatch

Hunters should take COVID precaution­s this fall

- Dave Golowenski

The fact that a significant percentage of wild Ohio deer tested last winter were positive for SARSCOV-2, the coronaviru­s pathogen that causes COVID-19 in people, doesn’t necessaril­y change the hunting game when the 2021-22 whitetail season opens later this month.

Prudent hunters, however, should wear rubber or throwaway surgical gloves when field-dressing a downed animal. And that’s only one of several justin-case precaution­s being recommende­d by the Ohio Division of Wildlife.

That’s because what was found in the wild deer captured by Ohio State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine — with test results confirmed at a federal lab — “is in fact the same virus” identified in late 2019 at the start of a global outbreak, said Mike Tonkovich, the wildlife division’s deer project leader.

None of the infected Ohio deer showed signs of disease.

People aren’t consistent­ly as fortunate. Infection symptoms range from none to hospitaliz­ation and death. COVID is officially blamed for almost 650,000 deaths in the United States and around 4.5 million worldwide.

SARS-COV-2 is known to infect a number of wild and domesticat­ed animals, some more readily than others. Deer, it turns out, are among the creatures that, like humans, are prone to the pathogen.

Researcher­s earlier this year noted “a high degree of similarity” between the SARS-COV-2 receptor in humans and deer, and they demonstrat­ed in lab testing that deer are “highly susceptibl­e to infection.”

A U.S. Department of Agricultur­e study conducted around the same time showed about a third of the hundreds of deer sampled between January 2020 and March 2021 in Pennsylvan­ia, New York, Michigan and Illinois possessed SARS-COV-2 antibodies.

What made the Ohio deer results unique was that the active SARS-COV-2 virus was discovered, not merely antibodies, and the virus was found in about 35 percent of the animals. Those tests, of course, offer a snapshot of the Buckeye State deer landscape months ago, not a guidebook for what lies ahead.

While it’s probable that humans spread SARSCOV-2 into the North American deer population, no evidence to this point indicates whitetails are infecting people, though that possibilit­y remains.

Because deer don’t exhibit overt symptoms from an active SARS-COV-2 infection there’s no way to know whether a deer has the disease. To this point, however, deer seem to pose little threat to hunters who take care.

Testing shows the coronaviru­s isn’t present in blood, body muscle, lungs, kidneys, trachea or colon. Sources of infection are mostly the nose, throat and upper respirator­y areas.

Under such circumstan­ces, wearing rubber gloves is a no-brainer. Equally important is keeping hands away from the face.

“Don’t eat. Don’t smoke” while field dressing, Tonkovich said. “You might want to wear a face covering,” he added.

outdoors@dispatch.com

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