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BRUCELLOSIS TEST-AND-REMOVAL PILOT PROJECT
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PINEDALE - Wyoming Game and Fish Department (WGFD) personnel successfully initiated the second year of the Muddy Creek elk test-and-removal pilot project on Monday and Tuesday. Wildlife managers captured 173 elk at the Muddy Creek feedground south of Pinedale. Of those, 79 adult cow elk were bled and tested, with 13 of those elk testing seropositive for brucellosis. Biologists recently classified the Muddy Creek feedground and determined that there were a total of 383 elk on the feedground, with 228 being adult female test eligible animals.

There was one trap-related mortality associated with the operation. A juvenile cow

sustained injuries in the trap and had to be euthanized. So far, over 500 elk have been processed through the trap with a total of three trap mortalities. When handling such a large number of elk, capture mortality is always a possibility.

All seropositive elk that were considered most likely to transmit the disease through five serological tests were transported to a USDA approved slaughter facility in Idaho. The facility only accepts live animals to be slaughtered for human consumption, so live elk were transported to the facility to be processed and packaged. The meat from these animals will be donated to the public. The Department is currently working with the Rocky Mountain Food Distribution Center exploring options to have the meat donated to qualified individuals throughout Wyoming.

The pilot project was one of 28 recommendations made by the Governor's Brucellosis

Coordination Team (BCT) in a comprehensive effort to deal with brucellosis in Wyoming. The members of this group were tasked to come up with effective long-term solutions to the brucellosis problem in Wyoming and to come up with new ideas on how to manage brucellosis.

"WGFD is dedicated to completing our commitments to the Governor's Brucellosis

Coordination Team," said Scott Talbott, Assistant Wildlife Division Chief for Game and Fish, who coordinated the project. "This project is difficult for personnel who are trained as wildlife professionals. I'm proud they can complete this task in the most professional manner, knowing they are making a difference in how we manage brucellosis."

The project was a large cooperative effort between the WGFD, Animal Plant and Health

Inspection Service (APHIS), the University of Wyoming, Wyoming State Veterinary Laboratory, and Sublette County Sheriff's Office.

"This operation required a large amount of department resources," said Talbott. The

project required 46 personnel including veterinarians, laboratory staff, biologists, game wardens, and other logistical support.

The agency plans to trap at Muddy Creek one more time this season to attempt to capture

all the seropositive adult females at the feedground. Muddy Creek is only the start of this project. In the coming years, the agency will be trapping at Scab and Fall Creek feedgrounds, in addition to Muddy Creek.

In addition to the removal of seropositive elk, there is also valuable research in brucellosis management evolving from this scientific experiment. Currently, blood samples from captured elk will only show if the animal has been exposed to Brucella abortus, the bacteria responsible for brucellosis infection. Tissue samples will be collected from all 13 seropositive elk. These tissues will be cultured to determine if the slaughtered animals were actually infected and capable of transmitting the disease.

"We're hoping to find a better predictor of brucellosis culture positive elk from the five

blood tests we used," said Hank Edwards, WGFD wildlife disease specialist. "Research of this magnitude had never been possible until this project, it's a very valuable component of the pilot project."

There is other important scientific research that is making use of the biological samples.

Biologists are utilizing samples removed from elk that are culture negative, or unable to transmit the disease, in a project examining scavenging rates on feedgrounds. This research recently led to the recommendation that predators and scavengers shouldn't be lethally removed from feedground areas.

There is also cooperative research being conducted with the United States Geological Survey on the relationship between parasites, such as lungworms, and rates of brucellosis infections on feedgrounds. Some evidence suggests that parasites may play a role in disease transmission.

The Wyoming Governor's Brucellosis Coordination Team outlined this as critical

research for managing brucellosis in wildlife. Brucellosis transmitted to cattle herds from elk caused Wyoming to lose its brucellosis free status in 2004. Wyoming recently regained its Brucellosis Class Free status in September 2006, however the reservoir of brucellosis remains in western Wyoming's elk and bison herds. Ongoing research is part of the effort to eliminate brucellosis in wildlife and maintain Class Free status for the state.

The Governor's Brucellosis Coordination Team made the recommendation for the pilot

test-and-removal experiment to last five years. Currently, WGFD plans to expand the project to nearby Fall Creek and Scab Creek feedgrounds, which are also in the Pinedale Elk Herd Unit, in 2008 and 2009 respectively. The project has been limited to removing up to 10% (191 elk) of the elk herd unit's population each year.

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