Spreading wildlife disease threatens deer, elk and maybe humans, new research says
The continuing spread of a fatal wildlife disease in Alberta and Saskatchewan has a federal agency recommending a deer cull across a wide swath of the Prairies.
And soon-to-be-published research on chronic wasting disease has raised new fears about whether the illness could infect humans.
“I would say this question was answered with 'yes,”' said Hermann Schaetzl, a veterinary scientist at the University of Calgary.
Schaetzl's work was discussed in a recent report from the Canadian Agri-Food Policy Institute, which advises the federal government on agriculture policy. Earlier this month, the institute concluded that in addition to human health concerns, the disease's spread over the last decade threatens Western Canada's agriculture, wildlife and food security.
“It's continuing to increase in its spread and the speed of its spread,” said Ted Bilyea, the institute's strategy officer.
Chronic wasting disease affects animals such as deer, caribou, moose and elk, attacking nervous systems with universally fatal results. Like mad cow disease or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, it is caused by prions - misshapen proteins that can persist in the environment for up to a decade, able to transfer their shape to healthy proteins.
It was first found in Canada in 1996. Since then, it has appeared in deer and elk in Saskatchewan, Alberta and Quebec.
In 2019, Alberta found 11 per cent of animals submitted by hunters tested positive, up from seven per cent in previous years. It was also found in moose for the first time.
Maps in the report show that in 2008 the disease was limited to isolated outbreaks in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Now, it's considered well-established throughout Alberta's southeast quarter and Saskatchewan's southern half.
The report also discussed an experiment conducted on macaque monkeys, considered the closest animal analog to humans.
In 2006, German scientists began feeding macaques with meat from animals infected with the disease. Because it can take years for the disease to show, the monkeys weren't euthanized and tested until two years ago.
The first tests were ambiguous. But Schaetzl, who helped conduct confirmatory tests, said it became clear the monkeys had developed low-level infections.
“The more we did, the more we could confirm the macaques were infected.”
Although Schaetzl's work is still being peer-reviewed, it has been presented in conferences and is widely discussed among disease experts.
“I was shocked when we first learned of the results,” said Neil Cashman, a leading prion expert at the University of British Columbia. “It's absolutely confirmative that this happened - you could give macaques a prion disease through oral consumption of contaminated meat."
Because the disease is so new and takes so long to develop, Cashman said there could already be people suffering from a human form of chronic wasting disease.
“(For) many people with a spinal cord syndrome, it wouldn't even occur to the treating neurologist that this could be a prion disease,” he said. “It's going to take some education and alertness to even think of the diagnosis.”
To keep tainted meat out of the food supply, Saskatchewan and Alberta require deer and elk farmers to test every animal that dies on their farms, including slaughtered animals. If the disease is found on an Alberta farm, the herd is depopulated and the farmer is prohibited from restocking with animals susceptible to it.
There have been no cases of cattle catching the disease from wild animals.
“It's easy to go down a doomsday scenario but I don't think we're there yet,” said Dr. Keith Lehman, Alberta's provincial veterinarian. “I think it's low-risk.”
He points out macaques may be close to humans, but they're still a different species.
Still, Bilyea warns chronic wasting disease threatens Alberta's wildlife. It's already shrinking Montana deer herds.
It also threatens hunters - especially those who depend on game to fill the freezer. The report warns of dire consequences if the disease gets into caribou, a threatened species in the mountains and a staple for many northern First Nations.
“The southern range (of caribou) is pretty much the northern range for our survey,” Bilyea said. “If (prions) pass through that, then we have a genuine food security problem for our northern people.”
The report's first recommendation is the creation of a deer-depopulated buffer zone to separate caribou range from infected animals.
“We don't have any buffer zone,” said Bilyea. “It's not a very pleasant idea, but this is not a very pleasant topic.”
Alberta has previously tried deer culls in an effort to keep the disease confined to Saskatchewan. But Lehman said it might be time to try again.
“It's worth considering,” he said. “I think it's justified.”
Chronic wasting disease also threatens the reputation of Canadian agriculture.
A 2003 outbreak of mad cow disease in northern Alberta damaged Canadian food exports for years. Norway has already passed regulations prohibiting the import of Canadian hay and straw from jurisdictions with chronic wasting disease.
Cashman said he no longer eats deer or elk.
“I hear the alarm bells going off,” he said.
“I would have expected a human case to emerge in the U.S. before Canada. But on the weight of evidence, I think it's not only not impossible, it's kind of expected at this point.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 15, 2021.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
U.K. prime minister calls national election for July 4
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called a national election on Wednesday, naming July 4 as the date for a vote his governing Conservatives are widely expected to lose to the opposition Labour Party after 14 years in power.
Woman found dead in Lake Ontario in 2017 matches identity of missing person in Switzerland
Genetic genealogy has helped Toronto police identify a woman who was found dead in Lake Ontario in 2017.
Fish oil supplements may raise risk of stroke, heart issues, study suggests
As an excellent source of heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids, daily fish oil supplements are a popular way to keep the risk of cardiovascular disease at bay.
Private island on Nova Scotia's South Shore listed for $15.8M
A private island on Nova Scotia’s South Shore has been listed for sale with a $11.5-million USD price tag.
DEVELOPING Blood vial delivery prompts evacuation of Republican headquarters in Washington
The headquarters of the Republican National Committee in Washington, D.C., was briefly evacuated on Wednesday morning after a suspicious package containing two vials of blood was delivered to the building, the police said.
'Happy tears' of victim's sister after prison attack on serial killer Robert Pickton
Cynthia Cardinal said she was 'overwhelmed' with happiness when she received a text message on Monday with the news that serial killer Robert Pickton, who murdered her sister, was attacked in prison. She called it 'karma.'
Montreal photographer captures dramatic Canada goose vs. fox fight on video
A Montreal photographer captured the moment a Canada goose defended itself from a fox at the Botanical Garden.
'On the edge of failing': Most of Canada gets a 'D' on poverty report cards
Poverty and food insecurity have worsened in most of Canada in the past year and most provincial governments aren't doing enough to address the problem, according to a just-released series of report cards.
World's most expensive feather sells at New Zealand auction
A feather from a long-extinct New Zealand bird has set a record after selling for $46,521 NZD (about US$28,400), the auction house handling the sale has said.