Last week, the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (TWRA) announced that hunter-harvested deer in Dickson and Williamson counties had tested positive for chronic wasting disease (CWD), the first positive tests for both counties.
Dickson County is in the north-central part of Tennessee, roughly 35 miles west of Nashville. Williamson County is in the central part of the state, just south of Nashville. TWRA didn’t offer any details on the cases.
“Because these counties are not within or immediately adjacent to the current CWD Management Zone, there will be no changes to transportation or feeding regulations at this time,” it said in a news release. “However, hunters are now eligible for the Earn-a-Buck Program. Hunters can earn additional bucks by harvesting antlerless deer in Dickson and Williamson counties and submitting them for testing.”
Increased CWD sampling and monitoring
The agency said that it will increase CWD sampling and monitoring in Dickson and Williamson counties in response to the new cases. So far this hunting season, TWRA has submitted about 9,186 samples for testing.
Because these counties are not within or immediately adjacent to the current CWD Management Zone, there will be no changes to transportation or feeding regulations at this time.
CWD is a fatal neurodegenerative disease of cervids such as deer, elk, and moose. It spreads from animal to animal and through environmental contamination via infectious misfolded proteins called prions. There is no vaccine or treatment. While CWD isn’t known to infect people, health officials urge against eating the meat of infected or sick cervids and encourage using caution when handling carcasses.