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Ontario Looking For Hunters’ Support Monitoring Chronic Wasting Disease

Photo by Rhett Noonan on Unsplash

The Ontario government is asking hunters to submit deer tissue samples as part of its Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) surveillance program to allow for early detection of the disease.

Hunter samples from harvested deer are critical in Ontario’s efforts to detect CWD – a fatal, untreatable brain disease affecting members of the deer family including white-tailed deer, elk, moose and caribou. It has not been found in Ontario wildlife but has been detected in all five U.S. states bordering Ontario, as well as Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Québec.

In 2023, the ministry will be doing surveillance in three target regions throughout the hunting season:

During the fall hunt, wildlife research technicians will be canvassing these surveillance areas and asking hunters’ permission to remove a small amount of tissue from the deer head for analysis.

Sampling will not prevent hunters from consuming the meat or having the head mounted.

All hunters within the surveillance areas are encouraged to take the head of their deer (preferably within a few days of being harvested) to an MNRF freezer depot. Depots will be open from October to mid-December.

If you see a deer, elk or moose showing signs of CWD, such as severe loss of body weight, tremors, stumbling, or lack of coordination, please report it to one of the following:

To learn more about how you can help keep CWD out of Ontario, please visit ontario.ca/cwd.

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