A troubled Winona County deer farm recently described by the state Board of Animal Health as having "a good history of CWD surveillance" reportedly lost a buck that was killed by a neighboring hunter and never tested for the disease.
The escaped 10-pointer was shot in 2007 by an Illinois man who kept its ear tag and mounted the deer's head and antlers. The ear tag links the deer to the same deer farm reported by authorities last month to be wholly infected with chronic wasting disease (CWD).
The long-delayed hunting report from a neighbor of Winona County deer farmer Bruce Hoseck is the third report received recently by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR), raising suspicions of farmed deer escaping into the wild. It's an issue likely to be addressed Friday by Legislative Auditor Jim Nobles when his office reports on how the Board of Animal Health has carried out its oversight duties of deer and elk farms.
The DNR has complained that the Board of Animal Health is too cozy with deer farmers to ideally protect the state's invaluable wild deer herd from infected game farm deer. The contagious and fatal deer and elk disease has taken hold in Wisconsin and Iowa and is now appearing in wild deer in Minnesota's Fillmore County.
One of the issues to be covered in the legislative auditor's report is to what extent the Board of Animal Health and DNR have coordinated efforts to contain the spread of CWD.
"For us it's indicative of what might be a larger problem," Lou Cornicelli, DNR wildlife research manager, said of the recent cases.
He said increased public awareness of the issue is resulting in more reports of escaped game farm deer.
Roadkill mystery
Earlier this month, DNR wildlife officials drove to Hitterdal in northwestern Minnesota to recover a roadkill deer that reportedly was wearing a red tag in its right ear when it was hit. The motorist submitted a photograph of the deer to authorities but didn't check the tag. By the time the DNR located the deer two days later, someone had cut off its right ear and sliced the animal's left ear, possibly to remove a second tag, according to a DNR document.