JONESBORO — The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission has confirmed that a hunter-harvested white-tailed deer taken in Craighead County tested positive for chronic wasting disease.
The 2-year-old doe was harvested near Jonesboro during the Arkansas modern gun deer hunt. A CWD sample was collected by an AGFC employee at a biological checkstation that the hunter used for processing. That sample tested positive for CWD and was confirmed by the Wisconsin Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory in Madison.
In addition to Craighead County, three new counties are being added to the CWD Management Zone due to their proximity to other CWD positive cases found. Sharp, Cleburne and Mississippi counties will also be added to the CWD Management Zone. Sharp will be added due to the cluster of infected deer found within 5 miles of the county line in northwestern Randolph County near Dalton. In Cleburne County, a positive deer was found in close proximity to the county line near Shirley in Van Buren County along with a detection in 2022 in Independence County near Locust Grove. Several CWD positive deer just across the Mississippi River from Mississippi County in Tipton County, Tennessee have been found. In all three of these new counties, infected deer were found within the 10-mile buffer zone which increases the overall likelihood of the disease already being present in these counties. This proactive measure of including counties based on risk values is outlined in the state’s CWD Management and Response Plan. Visit www.agfc.com/cwd for a complete list of CWD counties in Arkansas.
Cory Gray, chief of the AGFC’s Research Division, said, “Protecting the health of Arkansas’s deer herd is our top priority. We are being very proactive in all of our CWD management areas. Our desire is not to disrupt hunting, but to proactively address this disease while it is potentially at low prevalence.”
In keeping with the AGFC’s CWD Management and Response Plan, there will be no changes to deer-hunting regulations for the remainder of the 2023-24 deer hunting season.