SALT LAKE CITY — While COVID-19 was confirmed in white-tailed deer in parts of the U.S. last year, the virus was recently confirmed in Utah mule deer for the first time after the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources submitted samples taken from deer during winter health assessments.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service has been collaborating on a research study to test various wildlife species for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19). As part of the study, DWR biologists collected nasal swab samples and blood samples from deer during the annual helicopter captures where biologists perform a health check and place GPS collars on the animals. From November to December, samples were taken from roughly 280 deer statewide and were sent to two USDA labs in other states for testing.
On March 22, the APHIS’ National Veterinary
Services Lab in Ames, Iowa confirmed a case of the SARS-CoV-2 delta variant in
one of the samples submitted from a female mule deer in Morgan County. Only one
deer tested positive for the virus from the nasal samples, but several other
Utah deer had the antibodies in their blood samples, indicating the virus had
been in the deer population prior to the capture.
“While it is confirmed
that mule deer are susceptible to this virus, the deer that we took samples
from did not show any clinical signs of the illness, and there isn’t any
evidence that it is killing mule deer,” DWR State Veterinarian Ginger Stout
said. “There is also no evidence that animals, including mule deer, are playing
a significant role in spreading SARS-CoV-2 to people, and the available
research suggests that the likelihood of getting COVID-19 from an animal is
quite low.”
It is unclear how the
mule deer was exposed to the delta variant of COVID-19. It is possible it may
have been exposed through people, other deer or another animal species.
There is no evidence
that people can get COVID-19 by eating meat from an infected animal. However,
hunters should always practice good food hygiene when processing harvested
wildlife by doing the following:
- Don’t allow
contact between wildlife and domestic animals, including pets and hunting
dogs.
- Do not harvest animals that appear sick or are found
already dead.
- Keep game meat clean, and cool the meat down as soon as
possible after harvesting the animal.
- Avoid cutting through the animal’s backbone and spinal
tissues, and do not eat the brains of wildlife.
- When handling and cleaning game meat, wear rubber or
disposable gloves. Don’t eat, drink or smoke while handling the meat.
- When
you are finished handling and cleaning the meat, wash your hands
thoroughly with soap and water.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s APHIS will be conducting further research on the potential effects of SARS-CoV-2 in free-ranging mule deer in Utah and other Western states.
Media contact: DWR
Public Information Officer Faith Heaton Jolley at 385-266-2640
--
Faith Heaton Jolley
Public Information Officer
Outreach
Section Assistant Chief
Utah Division of
Wildlife Resources
Cell: 385-266-2640
No comments:
Post a Comment