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Biologists continue to seek answers on outbreak of deer disease.


Byline: INSIDE THE OUTDOORS By Mike Stahlberg The Register-Guard

Wildlife biologists '''

The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
A wildlife biologist is someone who studies wild animals and their habitats.
 from throughout Western Oregon This article is about the region of Western Oregon. For the University, see Western Oregon University.
Western Oregon is a geographical term that is generally taken to apply to the portion of the state of Oregon that is west of the Cascade Range.
 are gathered in Salem today, brainstorming about blacktail deer conservation.

Meanwhile, 25 miles away at E.E. Wilson Wildlife Area, construction is under way on pens to hold 30 deer that soon will be trapped for a three-year, $230,000 research project on deer disease.

These are the latest developments in the continuing saga of Deer Hair Loss Syndrome (DHLS DHLS Department of Homeland Security ), an outbreak that coincides with a downward spiral in West Coast blacktail deer populations. First noted in Washington in 1995, DHLS has since spread throughout Western Oregon and Northern California Northern California, sometimes referred to as NorCal, is the northern portion of the U.S. state of California. The region contains the San Francisco Bay Area, the state capital, Sacramento; as well as the substantial natural beauty of the redwood forests, the northern .

Hunter success in Western Oregon is now less than half what it was 15 years ago - a sure sign the population has plummeted.

The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission moved last fall to ease hunting pressure on blacktail by shortening the 2004 rifle season, and by eliminating thousands of antlerless deer tags. It also asked biologists to develop additional conservation measures for possible use in 2005.

Whatever the biologists come up with this week will be presented to the commission in February. It will be outlined locally at the Feb. 18 meeting of the Oregon Hunter's Association at 7 p.m. in the upstairs meeting room of the union hall at 1116 S. "A" St., Springfield.

Deer Hair Loss Syndrome is not a typical animal disease, which flares up for a year or two then fades away. It's not even a disease in the usual sense of being caused by bacteria or viruses because deer suffering from hair loss syndrome are infested in·fest  
tr.v. in·fest·ed, in·fest·ing, in·fests
1. To inhabit or overrun in numbers or quantities large enough to be harmful, threatening, or obnoxious:
 with lice, not germs.

The lice drive blacktail into an antsy ant·sy  
adj. ant·si·er, ant·si·est Slang
1. Restless or impatient; fidgety: The long wait made the children antsy.

2.
 state of distraction, in which the deer constantly bite, scratch with their hooves hooves  
n.
A plural of hoof.


hooves
Noun

a plural of hoof

hooves hoof
 and rub against trees or other objects until, eventually, large patches of hide are rubbed bare and exposed to the elements.

It's a state in which the deer become undernourished because, as biologist Bill Castillo explained during a recent talk to the Oregon Foundation for Blacktail Deer, "They spend all their time scratching instead of feeding."

Deer have always had lice, Castillo said, "and we've never seen this kind of impact before."

So biologists aren't certain whether the lice are the cause of the die-off, or a symptom of some larger, more insidious problem.

Wildlife laboratories so far have found no evidence of "toxicity," which should be present if the hair loss were caused by, say, herbicides sprayed on forestlands. Nor, said Castillo, have any suspect viruses been found in infected deer.

So researchers have been looking more closely at the parasites - the lice.

"We're coming to the conclusion there's a strong possibility these lice may be an exotic, unclassified un·clas·si·fied  
adj.
1. Not placed or included in a class or category: unclassified mail.

2.
 species of the genus Damalinia," a lice typically found on "Old World" ungulates ungulates, ungulata

animals with hooves; cattle, sheep, goat, pig, horse and many wild and other domesticated species.
, such as Axis, Sika and Fallow deer fallow deer

a small, 150 lb, fawn deer with white spots and a white spot bordered with black on each buttock. Called also Dama dama.
, Castillo said.

Such a finding would invite speculation that the lice were somehow introduced into the wild deer population via exotic deer imported by game ranchers.

"That's certainly a possibility," Castillo said.

"Every animal moved around is carrying some passengers, and most are pretty host-specific."

But speculation is all that it can be at this point, because scientists don't yet know enough about DHLS.

The study to be conducted by Oregon State researchers will hopefully answer questions about how DHLS is transmitted - such as whether the lice can migrate from one deer to another without physical contact between the two deer.

Researchers also want to know if Eastern Oregon's mule deer mule deer

Large-eared deer (Odocoileus hemionus) of western North America that lives alone or in small groups at high altitudes in summer and lower altitudes in winter. Mule deer stand 3–3.
 population is susceptible, so several mule deer will be inoculated with lice. And whether deer that survive their first exposure to DHLS develop any immunity or resistance.

"There's a lot of basic questions we hope to determine the answers to," Castillo said.

Hunters can only hope those answers aren't too long in coming.

Mike Stahlberg can be reached at mstahlberg@guardnet.com.
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Title Annotation:Columns
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Article Type:Column
Date:Jan 15, 2004
Words:644
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