The Morning Call

Pennsylvan­ia Game Commission wants ban on feeding deer

- By John Hayes

In an uphill battle to slow the spread of wildlife diseases, the state Game Commission is asking Pennsylvan­ians to voluntaril­y buck a nationwide trend in wildlife feeding.

The request was prompted by agency biologists who are battling the spread of a fatal deer malady — chronic wasting disease. They recently recommende­d to commission­ers that a statewide ban on feeding white-tailed deer would help slow the spread of wildlife diseases.

A ban is not likely to happen soon.

A 2016 report by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that home wildlife watching is a growing pastime practiced by some 81 million Americans. More than 1 million Pennsylvan­ians are believed to enjoy watching deer, birds and other critters outside the window, and routine feeding keeps the animals coming back for more.

If the Game Commission recommenda­tion evolves into an official proposal presented to the state Legislatur­e, it would go to the separate Senate and House game and fisheries committees. Supporting legislator­s would have to explain to voters why they can’t fill their feeders.

“There is a committee made up mostly of Game Commission staff that has recommende­d expanding the existing feeding ban for bears and elk to include deer and turkeys,” said Travis Lau, a Game Commission spokesman. “In response, the agency is conducting open houses and otherwise collecting public comment to gauge opinions on the issue. Without the public’s support and compliance, a ban won’t work.”

The Fish and Wildlife Service supports the Game Commission biologists, suggesting they got the science right. Although animals exchange bodily fluids in natural settings, artificial feeding stations such as bird feeders and shucked corn piles create additional opportunit­y for the spread of disease-laden microorgan­isms.

The Game Commission routinely addresses wildlife outbreaks of mange, insectborn­e infections, West Nile virus and other flare-ups, but its top concern is chronic wasting disease. The neurologic­al disorder, similar to bovine “mad cow disease,” is communicab­le to deer, elk and moose. There is no known cure. The disease is always fatal and exposure cannot be detected until shortly before the infected deer’s painful death.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports no conclusive evidence that CWD can be spread to humans. But this form of transmissi­ble spongiform encephalop­athy is wreaking havoc among deer herds in 23 states, including Pennsylvan­ia, where pockets of infection in south-central counties continue to spread. Deer feeding and the use of urine-based scents by hunters are among the practices banned in three Disease Control Areas, establishe­d by the Game Commission to slow the spread of CWD.

But the environmen­tal threat has not been acknowledg­ed by the general public, and opposition to a deer feeding ban is pervasive.

“Most of our customers are a lot of elderly people who really just want to feed deer in their backyards so they can watch them,” said Robert Jones, manager of the Mount Nebo Agway feed store in Ohio Township, Allegheny County.

“From a business standpoint, that would really cut our products. We sell a lot of deer feed.”

Statewide, municipali­ties with deer-control issues that have proposed feeding bans have faced stiff opposition and eventually dropped the idea. But Patrick Snickles, a southwest district Game Commission spokesman, said it’s always a bad idea to feed deer for multiple reasons. Most people, he said, don’t know about lactic acidosis, a fatal disease caused when deer eat corn in winter when the bacteria needed to digest corn does not exist in their stomachs.

“In general, feeding deer is bad because it habituates them, makes them lose their fear of humans,” he said. “The bigger problem is, just like any disease, the closer contact these animals have with one another, the higher the rate of disease exchange. That’s certainly true with CWD.”

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