County makes slight change for culling for CWD
By JoAn Bjarko
North Forty News
The Colorado Division of Wildlife will not be culling deer for chronic
wasting disease in Horsetooth Mountain Park because Larimer County Commissioners
wanted diseased animals to first be identified with tonsillar biopsies.
Excluding personnel costs, tonsillar biopsies cost about $300 per animal
in areas where deer are easy to capture, CWD field coordinator Fred Quartarone
said in a letter to the commissioners. In response, county parks and open
lands director Gary Buffington said the county will not allow hunting or
DOW sharpshooting as an alternative to biopsies in the popular public park.
The DOW had wanted to take eight deer from the area for ongoing research
and herd reduction.
CWD is a fatal neurological disease afflicting some Colorado deer and elk
herds. As part of the effort to track the occurrence and distribution of
the disease, the DOW has been culling herds and also testing deer, elk
and moose heads submitted by hunters.
In January, the DOW asked commissioners for permission to cull herds again
on some county-owned lands. Commissioners agreed to some of the sites,
but with more restrictive conditions than years past. In the Redtail Ridge
Open Space in the Little Thompson area, for example, commissioners disallowed
the use of sharpshooting.
In March, Quartarone asked the commissioners to reconsider the restriction,
and they agreed that sharpshooters could kill up to 15 deer in the rugged
open space. The area is not open to the public at this time.
No culling will take place in Eagle's Nest Open Space near Livermore this
year, but it could be opened to public hunting next year.
At the March meeting with Quartarone, Commissioner Kathay Rennels took
the opportunity to chastise the Colorado Wildlife Commission for no longer
requiring mandatory CWD testing in Larimer County, which is considered
a hot spot for the disease. "This sends a very weird message to folks,"
she said.
CWD testing for deer and elk is now voluntary statewide, but hunters are
still required to submit moose heads for testing. No moose has tested positive
for the disease to date.
|