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In your area of the country, I would agree. Why bother testing if it isn't required.I just dropped off 2 elk heads to our bios. I asked what they have seen so far. Last year there were 2 cases....this year 2 cases and one on the Spokane rez.
Seems like a lot of hype for a nothing sandwich.
Haven't thought s lot about it before but I'm guessing it has a lower impact on trophy potential in whitetails since they tend to peak at 4-6 where mule deer are 5-7 years old.All the best big buck areas are in the cwd hot zones. I’m not sure there is any correlation.
Alternatively in the northern areas where it is not as prevalent we see much fewer mature deer.
Not a great comparison here. 89% of the WI CWD cases are in the southern farmland zones as it says in your link. Statistically they are not the same as the IL percent positive (9.9%) is looking at the endemic area and the WI percent positive (10%) is the whole state.Nothing like living and hunting for decades in the WI CWD hot zone.
Here is the data YOU used to support your null argument.
The most recent official surveillance report for Illinois (FY 2025; July 1, 2024 – June 30, 2025) provides good statewide data, but it only breaks down prevalence for the CWD endemic area, not the entire state as a single figure. So there simply isn’t data for the ENTIRE state of IL overall as you state. The best estimate FROM IL is:
“Within the 21-county CWD endemic area, the apparent prevalence was ~9.2%.”
Now for WI which has far more complete data. Cause as everyone knows WI is just better than IL in every way.
“Statewide estimated CWD prevalence ~10 % among tested wild deer in Wisconsin.” Note, this is nearly identical to IL not the 2% you are claiming to be true.
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Wisconsin sampling uncovers 10% overall CWD rate, 21% in south
The state DNR said that 89% of the positive cases were found in the Southern Farmland Zone.www.cidrap.umn.edu
So in SUMMARY WI is around 10% and IL is around 9.2%. So statistically their prevalence rates are identical.
You also claim IL is somehow in the midst of some major culling effort, also unfounded.
“Illinois has shifted its CWD management approach, with a five-year pilot project beginning in 2025 focusing on sustainable management rather than eradication.”
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Illinois aiming for a sustainable approach to managing chronic wasting disease
The Illinois Department of Natural Resources is taking a new approach to managing chronic wasting disease (CWD) in a five-year pilot project, which aims at sustainability.chicago.suntimes.com
So there you have it. Everything you claim is incorrect. And people wonder why the majority have moved on from CWD hysteria in favor of it being nothing to worry about.
If you care to respond please provide links dispelling what i’ve provided.
I expect I have. I think our area (region 5) is one of the higher areasI agree that not all things line up. I have picked up 3 larger dead heads in the last 10 years. That isn't a lot but it is more than I found in the 20 years prior to that? I honestly chalked them up to winter kill or poor shot placement by a hunter. Could have been CWD? The only data we have to go off of is the testing conducted at check stations or by hunters who submit samples for testing.
Curious, would you eat a positive tested deer?
They aren't currently if you stay out of SE Wyoming.I’m not eating a critter testing positive for any disease. CWD or other.
I do want to shoot an elk. Are they impacted as much as the deer?
So basically any claims of numbers or rates of death due to CWD are complete speculation, correct?In regards to not seeing sick deer, and finding carcasses, Coyotes take care of dead deer overnight in most places and finding even a blood spot where the carcasses once was is rare at best.
I’m not eating a critter testing positive for any disease. CWD or other.
I do want to shoot an elk. Are they impacted as much as the deer?
No way I’m eating one, and they will go straight to the dumpster if they test positive. There are places in CO right now where 1 out of every 2 deer are positive, and the infection rate on bucks is most likely higher.
In regards to not seeing sick deer, and finding carcasses, Coyotes take care of dead deer overnight in most places and finding even a blood spot where the carcasses once was is rare at best.
Not a great comparison here. 89% of the WI CWD cases are in the southern farmland zones as it says in your link. Statistically they are not the same as the IL percent positive (9.9%) is looking at the endemic area and the WI percent positive (10%) is the whole state.
The percent of deer with CWD in the endemic area of WI, Sauk and Richland counties, is around 30% for 2025. Don’t forget that Richland county saw its lowest buck harvest in 45 years last year. While many other farmland counties had their best or top 5 buck harvest.
The low harvest could be explained by CWD causing there to be less bucks, less bucks worth shooting ie. only small bucks around, or decreased hunter effort due to not wanting to harvest a CWD positive deer.
So basically any claims of numbers or rates of death due to CWD are complete speculation, correct?
Like the MTFWP guy Robbie interviewed who claimed “we do know that it would be worse than if we’d done nothing”
No. We don’t know that. Where’s your control group?
It’s statements like that that destroy any credibility.
Where are they saying to check deer for human diseases? You have my attention.Have you tested all your deer for all possible human transmittable, or any diseases, prior to eating them? If not how do you know you haven’t eaten a deer with a disease already?
I’d bet it’s like 100% that you have with zero consequences.
I never said the sky was falling. I'm using the data provided by those biologists. Absolutely some deer test negative but the reality is hunters have a drastically higher chance of their deer or elk testing positive in SE wyoming. For those concerned with eating a CWD positive animal, I'm suggesting they apply in areas with lower prevalence.Sky is not falling.
Been hunting this region for 37 years. Had a grand total of 2 deer test positive for cwd and maybe 3 elk.
Taken at least 40 elk out of area 6 and mature mule deer buck every year in area 59.
Took 2 nice mature bucks this year , both negative. Same last year.
We also have good biologist and research contacts, head of the Vet Lab and many of the guys who have written papers on the subject.
I wouldn't worry too much but get your animal tested if you're concerned.
Head of the vet lab was pretty confident at least 1 of our deer would be positive, guess what- neither was.
Had a nice talk with her about aging every deer they test and she said makes perfect sense.
Pointed out to her how you say no mature bucks in area 59 due to cwd when you don't age them?
And our bucks are getting aged.
Be interesting to talk with her after that age comes in.
Empirical date suggests deer herds may suffer but the guys we talked with that wrote the papers and did the studies say the herds will survive.