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TB Prevalence Increases Slightly in Deer Herd in Core Area of Infection

Contact:  Steve Schmitt 517-336-5030
Agency: Natural Resources


March 9, 2009

The incidence of bovine tuberculosis (TB) in the deer herd in the core area of infection in northeastern Lower Michigan - Deer Management Unit 452 - increased slightly in 2008, the Department of Natural Resources announced last week at the Natural Resources Commission meeting.

DMU 452, which is located in Montmorency, Alpena, Oscoda and Alcona counties, saw the incidence in deer testing positive for TB increase to 1.8 percent from 1.4 percent in 2007. Although the incidence is still declining over the long term, the trend for rate of infection during the last six years is only changing slightly on an annual basis.

"We have brought the prevalence of TB down from 1995, but it appears to be stabilizing at this level during recent years," explained DNR Wildlife Veterinarian Steve Schmitt. "We may have lowered it as far as we can with our current strategy."

The DNR's strategy has been to ban feeding and baiting in the northeastern Lower Peninsula and to reduce the deer herd, by liberalizing the availability of antlerless deer licenses. The bait and feed ban has been extended to include the entire Lower Peninsula following the discovery of a deer with chronic wasting disease in a privately owned deer herd in Kent County last August.

Overall, the DNR tested 16,260 deer for TB in 2008. Of those, 36 were positive. Among TB-positive deer, 34 came from the four-county area, one from Presque Isle County and one from Iosco County.

Intensive testing in Shiawassee County, where a TB-positive deer was found in 2007, and six surrounding counties did not turn up any TB-positive deer, Schmitt said.

The DNR is committed to the conservation, protection, management, use and enjoyment of the state's natural resources
for current and future generations.

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