Thank you for giving me your opinion. I will give you a different opinion, but at the end of the day, it's just one of many and I realize that. I fully believe that mineral benefits herd health. You disagree, great. I don't think you are right.
Now that we are on the topic, please tell me why you think mineral piles will 'eventually' lead to a detriment to overall herd health? I would really be interested in hearing your expert opinion on this. I believe that you already understand that deer are very social animals. Let's take for instance, the breeding season (breeding, scraping, rubbing, fighting), does giving birth, bachelor bucks who are with each other all summer, etc.
You have the flu.....I spend all weekend with you, in the same house. I don't eat out of the same bowl as you, or off of the same fork. Would it be a fair assessment to state that I'm either going to get the flu or I'm not (that I have came into contact with the flu bug)? I think so. End of story. Show me proof of your above claims and I will tell you I'm wrong, otherwise, you are doing nothing but typing ignorant statements. Just my opinion.
First of all, thank you for thinking I'm an expert. I am not. I, like you, have opinions based or reading, past experiences, and our own logic. In other words, we are products of the past and we try to control the future based on our past experiences.
What are your claims? That disease will get passed on in an environment no matter what? Or is it even though exposed, some people will not get the flu?
Below is what I posted in the Legislative forum. It is a copy and paste because I have to get to the IBA Annual Meeting so we can continue to Promote, Protect and Defend wildlife in Iowa.
I sure wish I could point to a study that says mineral sites potentiate the spread of CWD, but I can't. I also can't point to a study that says they don't.
How many prions get passed from deer to deer by grooming, making scrapes, licking branches or any of the natural activities of deer? I don't know. How many prions are concentrated in a mineral pile that gets used over and over and over? I can't tell you that either. I've never seen a scrape that was more than an inch deep but I've seen plenty of mineral piles that end up several inches deep which means it would, anecdotally, contain more prions.
Again, anecdotally speaking, you haven't seen CWD spread from your mineral piles or mineral put out for cattle because luckily you don't have CWD in your area.
When CWD was found in Allamakee County I thought for sure the DNR would ban feeding/mineral piles in the immediate area. They didn't because the DNR is not in charge. When every other state that has confirmed cases of CWD banned feeding/mineral piles what does that mean? It means the preponderance of evidence shows that CWD can and is spread through feeding/mineral piles. It also means, to me, that other states are making decisions based on biology not politics.
I'm reminded of the old country docs who treated their patients empirically, based on experience and reason not a bunch of tests for this or tests for that. They had the experience and reason to tell them what to do. Perhaps we are using the wrong word. Perhaps empirical would be better suited than anecdotal.
I have long been a proponent of black and white when it comes to banning baiting. Not only for enforcement but for disease control. I can only hope that we aren't so short sighted that we continue to allow mineral piles and the spread of disease at the cost of our grandchildren's hunting.
I will add, that this is my personal opinion, not necessarily that of the IBA.