Posted on 03/09/2020 3:47:56 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Chronic wasting disease first appeared in Pennsylvania back in 2012. Now, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania are exploring some off-the-wall measures to identify the fatal neurological disease in deer and other cervid species before they expire. One approach UPenn is exploring is the use of disease-sniffing dogs to detect CWD in deer feces in one of three new research projects receiving $1 million from the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.
According to Penn Live, the department is supplying $242,246 for the project, which will be led by Cynthia Otto, professor and director of Penns School of Veterinary Working Dog Center.
Chronic wasting disease which has also been referred to as zombie deer disease is highly infectious and capable of staying dormant in an animal for an extended period of time before symptoms start to show. Experts also believe the disease can lay dormant in soil for years and still infect another animal. Not good!
The toughest part about diagnosing infected deer is that scientists have only been able to confirm the presence of CWD post-mortem by testing the animals brain tissue or lymph nodes.
This leads to the other two projects being explored by the university..
Penn Live claims the two additional projects will aim solely towards developing a live-animal test for chronic wasting disease, in hopes that it can successfully combat the spread of CWD. $561,000 will be granted to a project led by University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine biochemistry professor Anna Kashina, while $196,754 will go to a project by Davin Henderson, a protein chemist and founder of CWD Evolution LLC.
Scientists have made significant progress toward better understanding Chronic Wasting Disease in isolating genes associated with the disease, Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding explained. These projects show potential to build on that progress by speeding diagnosis, helping scientists better understand how CWD progresses and ultimately, learn how to keep it from spreading.
In terms of how this will affect deer hunting in the state; hunters in deer management areas (DMA) in Bedford and Fulton Counties stand to be the most affected, as CWD seems to be most concentrated in wild deer in the south-central parts of the state. DMAs now cover more than 8,000 square miles of Pennsylvania.
Last year, landowner resistance forced officials to withdraw an effort to control the spread of CWD in Bedford and Blair county by reducing deer numbers through targeted removal. This situation led to the eventual creation of an anti-targeted removal organization, Sportsmen of the Future. The Pennsylvania Game Commission has since proposed a new plan for slowing the spread of CWD that includes targeted removal when needed, more deer tags available, strict feeding bans, the banning of urine-based deer attractants and a considerable crackdown on the transportation of deer heads and other parts to areas outside of DWA zones.
Well, thats a relief. /sarc
No reliable test for Corona, I wonder if they could train dogs to recognize infected people before they show symptoms visually.
But won’t the dogs who sniff people spread the disease?
But won’t the dogs who sniff people spread the disease?
First think I thought of too.
Train dogs to find coronavirus.
My thoughts as well.
Dogs possess a sense of smell many times more sensitive than even the most advanced man-made instrument. Just how powerful is a pupper schnoz? Powerful enough to detect substances at concentrations of one part per trilliona single drop of liquid in 20 Olympic-size swimming pools. With training, dogs can sniff out bombs and drugs, pursue suspects, and find dead bodies. And more and more, theyre being used experimentally to detect human diseasecancer, diabetes, tuberculosis, and now, malariafrom smell alone. - https://www.wired.com/story/the-science-of-the-sniff-why-dogs-are-great-disease-detectors/
Dogs can detect dead bodies under water! (The bodies).
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.