More info on EHD from Omaha World Herald from a couple weeks ago. Since then the EHD has been hammering the deer herd across the state. Reports really started to spike after Labor Day weekend according to a NGPC employee.
Disease could affect white-tailed deer population
By
Mark Davis
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
Omaha World-Herald
DEER SIGHTINGS
If you see dead or struggling deer in or near bodies of water, call the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission at 402-471-0641.
Herd numbers of white-tailed deer could significantly be affected by epizootic hemorrhagic disease, Nebraska Game and Parks Commission officials warn.
“We have already lost thousands (of deer), and we will lose several thousand more,” said Kit Hams, big game program manager for Game and Parks.
The disease could also affect mule deer, pronghorn, big horn sheep and elk populations. It does not pose a threat to livestock or people, Hams said.
EHD, transmitted by the Cullcoides biting fly, or midge, is a virus that kills quickly and is more prevalent in drought conditions.
“It (the spread of the disease) started early and will last until the first hard freeze,” Hams said.
When infected, deer will move to water with an unquenchable thirst due to a high fever and die within 48 hours near or in the bodies of water. Those that survive the virus will develop an immunity to the disease, Hams said.
“This is not catastrophic,” Hams said. “There might be fewer deer for a couple of years, but we'll get through this just fine.”
Once dove and bow hunters start to move into the fields and wild areas, reports of die-offs are expected to increase. Most reports are coming from the Platte River Valley, Hams said.