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TB #14415
08/16/2016 11:48 AM
08/16/2016 11:48 AM
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 3,063
Richmond (Webster)
B
bean Offline OP
Hoosier Hunter
bean  Offline OP
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Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 3,063
Richmond (Webster)
Bovine TB Found in Wild, White-tailed Deer

Bovine tuberculosis (TB) has been diagnosed in a white-tailed deer in Franklin County, Ind. This marks the first time the disease has been found in a wild animal in Indiana. This finding means significant changes in disease monitoring requirements for cattle owners and deer hunters in the area.

The Indiana State Board of Animal Health (BOAH) has been working with the Indiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to test wildlife on a Franklin County cattle farm where TB was diagnosed in April. The 2-year-old doe that tested positive for TB was culled as part of the surveillance effort on the cattle farm.

Under federal requirements, finding TB in a free-ranging wild animal means testing of all cattle must expand from 3 miles to 10 miles and surveillance in hunter-harvested deer will intensify.

For cattle owners in Franklin County and portions of some adjoining counties, BOAH staff will be reaching out to determine if cattle in the 10-mile circle are test- eligible and, if so, schedule herd testing. BOAH’s premises registration program has approximately 400 farms registered in the 10-mile testing zone.

For deer hunters in the region, that means whitetails harvested in a specific zone must be sampled for laboratory testing. DNR will be providing more information to hunters in the coming weeks.

“This is an enormous undertaking that cannot be completed overnight,” said Indiana State Veterinarian Bret D. Marsh, DVM. “Farmers and hunters in this area have been extremely cooperative and supportive of our efforts over the years. We need their help now more than ever as we widen our surveillance efforts. If this disease is out there—either on farms or in the wild—we need to find it. Our status as a TB-free state is critical to our growing and thriving cattle and dairy industries in this state.”

Indiana has officially held a bovine tuberculosis-free status since 1984 with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Under federal guidelines, that status remains. BOAH has found four individual cases of TB in three cattle herds and a cervid farm in this region between 2008 and 2016.

About Bovine TB
Bovine tuberculosis is a chronic bacterial disease that affects primarily cattle, but can be transmitted to any warm-blooded animal. TB is difficult to diagnose through clinical signs alone. In the early stages of the disease, clinical signs are not visible. Later, signs may include: emaciation, lethargy, weakness, anorexia, low-grade fever and pneumonia with a chronic, moist cough. Lymph node enlargement may also be present. Cattle owners who notice these signs in their livestock should contact their private veterinarian.

Hunters should take precautions to protect themselves, including wearing gloves when field dressing animals and fully cooking all meat. Deer can be infected without noticeable signs of disease, like the positive 2-year-old doe. Hunters who notice signs of TB in wildlife should contact the DNR at 812-334-3795. Hunters who see signs of bovine TB while processing wildlife should contact BOAH at: 317-544-2405.

More information about the disease and the investigation, as it develops, will be available on the BOAH website at: www.in.gov/boah/2396.htm . Site visitors may subscribe to email updates about the current TB situation by visiting the webpage.


Fishing and honeybee time
Re: TB #14416
08/16/2016 12:36 PM
08/16/2016 12:36 PM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 7,595
Indpls,In US
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jbwhttail Offline
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jbwhttail  Offline
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 7,595
Indpls,In US
I feel for the hunters in the affected area, it is imperative that we cooperate with IDNR and BOAH. I am bothered that Dr. Marsh seems only concerned with the cattle and dairy industry....."Our status as a TB-free state is critical to our growing and thriving cattle and dairy industries in this state.”

The Deer Hunting sport also supports business all over the state in many ways.

Please take note that BOAH and IDNR urge hunters to use rubber gloves while field dressing animals, notice they did not say deer. TB can be in any mammals harvested by hunters and trappers including coyotes. the days of not wearing gloves are GONE!!!


When science meets tradition there will be sparks.....
Re: TB #14417
08/16/2016 12:47 PM
08/16/2016 12:47 PM
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,751
Fishers, IN USA
D
DNA Offline
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DNA  Offline
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,751
Fishers, IN USA
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Denise Derrer, Public Information Director, 317-544-2414; dderrer@boah.in.gov

Bovine TB Found in Wild, White-tailed Deer

INDIANAPOLIS (16 Aug 2016)—Bovine tuberculosis (TB) has been diagnosed in a white-tailed deer in Franklin County, Ind. This marks the first time the disease (more formally known as Mycobacterium bovis) has been found in a wild animal in Indiana. This finding means significant changes in disease monitoring requirements for cattle owners and deer hunters in the area.

The Indiana State Board of Animal Health (BOAH) has been working with the Indiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to test wildlife on a Franklin County cattle farm where TB was diagnosed in April. The 2-year-old doe that tested positive for TB was culled as part of the surveillance effort on the cattle farm.

Under federal requirements, finding TB in a free-ranging wild animal means testing of all cattle must expand from 3 miles to 10 miles and surveillance in hunter-harvested deer will intensify.

For cattle owners in Franklin County and portions of some adjoining counties, BOAH staff will be reaching out to determine if cattle in the 10-mile circle are test- eligible and, if so, schedule herd testing. BOAH’s premises registration program has approximately 400 farms registered in the 10-mile testing zone.

For deer hunters in the region, that means whitetails harvested in a specific zone must be sampled for laboratory testing. DNR will be providing more information to hunters in the coming weeks.

“This is an enormous undertaking that cannot be completed overnight,” said Indiana State Veterinarian Bret D. Marsh, DVM. “Farmers and hunters in this area have been extremely cooperative and supportive of our efforts over the years. We need their help now more than ever as we widen our surveillance efforts. If this disease is out there—either on farms or in the wild—we need to find it. Our status as a TB-free state is critical to our growing and thriving cattle and dairy industries in this state.”

Indiana has officially held a bovine tuberculosis-free status since 1984 with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Under federal guidelines, that status remains. BOAH has found four individual cases of TB in three cattle herds and a cervid farm in this region between 2008 and 2016.

About Bovine TB
Bovine tuberculosis is a chronic bacterial disease that affects primarily cattle, but can be transmitted to any warm-blooded animal. TB is difficult to diagnose through clinical signs alone. In the early stages of the disease, clinical signs are not visible. Later, signs may include: emaciation, lethargy, weakness, anorexia, low-grade fever and pneumonia with a chronic, moist cough. Lymph node enlargement may also be present. Cattle owners who notice these signs in their livestock should contact their private veterinarian.

Hunters should take precautions to protect themselves, including wearing gloves when field dressing animals and fully cooking all meat. Deer can be infected without noticeable signs of disease, like the positive 2-year-old doe. Hunters who notice signs of TB in wildlife should contact the DNR at 812-334-3795. Hunters who see signs of bovine TB while processing wildlife should contact BOAH at: 317-544-2405.

More information about the disease and the investigation, as it develops, will be available on the BOAH website at: www.in.gov/boah/2396.htm . Site visitors may subscribe to email updates about the current TB situation by visiting the webpage.
-30-


Denise Derrer
Public Information Director
Indiana State Board of Animal Health
Discovery Hall, Ste. 100
1202 E. 38th Street
Indianapolis, IN 46205-2898
Phone: 317-544-2414
www.boah.in.gov


"It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbled, or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena..."

THEODORE ROOSEVELT
Re: TB #14418
08/16/2016 12:49 PM
08/16/2016 12:49 PM
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,751
Fishers, IN USA
D
DNA Offline
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DNA  Offline
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D
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,751
Fishers, IN USA
Remember the first TB positive from this area came from captive Cervids.


"It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbled, or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena..."

THEODORE ROOSEVELT
Re: TB #14419
08/16/2016 01:20 PM
08/16/2016 01:20 PM
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,288
PlainField, IN
BREW... Offline
Hoosier Hunter
BREW...  Offline
Hoosier Hunter
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,288
PlainField, IN
Quote
Originally posted by DNA:
Remember the first TB positive from this area came from captive Cervids.
Do you have a link or a source for this info??

This is not the info BOAH has been telling folks in the last few months!


Guardian Of The One Buck Rule & Gunseason
"Some people just need a good *** whoopin. It keeps the planets aligned"
Re: TB #14420
08/16/2016 02:35 PM
08/16/2016 02:35 PM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 7,595
Indpls,In US
J
jbwhttail Offline
Hoosier Hunter
jbwhttail  Offline
Hoosier Hunter
J
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 7,595
Indpls,In US
Brew I think DNA is referencing the first TB outbreak as being in a captive cervid herd in 2008.

This should not be about "who" caused it BUT.........How do we contain it!


When science meets tradition there will be sparks.....
Re: TB #14421
08/16/2016 03:12 PM
08/16/2016 03:12 PM
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,288
PlainField, IN
BREW... Offline
Hoosier Hunter
BREW...  Offline
Hoosier Hunter
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,288
PlainField, IN
I agree and understand....just want make sure we're posting facts not hearsay!!


BTW....They need to stop folks from supplement feeding of Deer in the area as of now.


Guardian Of The One Buck Rule & Gunseason
"Some people just need a good *** whoopin. It keeps the planets aligned"
Re: TB #14422
08/16/2016 03:41 PM
08/16/2016 03:41 PM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 2,081
N.E. Indiana, Spitting distanc...
hornharvester Offline
Hoosier Hunter
hornharvester  Offline
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Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 2,081
N.E. Indiana, Spitting distanc...
Michigan dealt with TB in the 90's. Here is a pretty good article with pictures about TB in deer. h.h.

http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,1607,7-153-10319-99064--,00.html


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