Jan. 27, 2025
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Minnesota DNR News

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Jan. 27, 2025

For more information:

Contact the DNR Information Center
by email or call 888-646-6367.

In This Issue


DNR Fish and Wildlife Almanac

A weekly list of news briefs about fish, wildlife and habitat management.

Minnesota DNR webinars focus on fishers, outdoor classes at school

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources invites people interested in wildlife and outdoor skills to check out the winter program schedule for the Minnesota Outdoor Skills and Stewardship webinar series.

On Wednesday, Jan. 27, Michael Joyce, wildlife ecologist with the Natural Resources Research Institute, will share general information on fisher history and status in Minnesota, highlight factors contributing to their recent population decline, and describe ongoing research on the recent expansion of fishers into southern Minnesota.

Then, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, Luke Adam, teacher at Nashwauk-Keewatin High School, and students from the high school, will discuss outdoor classes, including how at their high school they have been able to integrate fishing, hunting and other outdoor pursuits into school class offerings. Adam and the students will share how the program started, the impact the classes are having, and suggestions on how to bring outdoor classes to other schools.

The Minnesota Outdoor Skills and Stewardship Series webinars are free and offered year-round, though registration is required. Visit the Outdoor Skills and Stewardship webpage of the Minnesota DNR website (mndnr.gov/discover) for the registration portal, more information about upcoming webinars and recordings of past webinars.

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Chronic wasting disease confirmed in wild deer in 2 new Minnesota deer permit areas

Cases confirmed in DPA 266 near Hawley and DPA 701 near Greenfield

Two adult male deer tested positive for chronic wasting disease in two deer permit areas without previous confirmed cases of the disease.

One deer was harvested in DPA 266 near Hawley in Clay County and the other deer was harvested in DPA 701 near Greenfield in Hennepin County. Both deer were harvested during the firearms deer season. The hunters submitted tissue samples via the DNR’s partner sampling program which consists mostly of taxidermists.

“This finding is concerning because it indicates possible new areas of CWD prevalence in wild deer where it hasn’t previously been detected,” said Erik Hildebrand, wildlife health supervisor with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. “This also highlights how important our disease surveillance efforts are and how critical it is that hunters are able to test deer harvested anywhere in the state if they would like to.”

The closest CWD positive wild deer to the one detected in DPA 701 is 31 miles from a positive in DPA 605. The CWD positive wild deer in DPA 266 is roughly 54 miles from the confirmed positive near Climax, Minnesota.

Following the detections in DPAs 266 and 701, the Minnesota DNR will implement measures outlined in its CWD response plan (mndnr.gov/cwd/cwd-response-plan.html), which calls for three consecutive years of testing to help determine the potential prevalence of the disease near the detections. 

Within DPAs where CWD has been detected and confirmed, the Minnesota DNR uses multiple management actions designed to help mitigate disease spread, including carcass movement restrictions, a deer feeding and attractant ban and, sometimes, increased hunting opportunities with increased bag limits.

Additional management actions will be taken per DNR’s CWD response plan, likely this fall, and might include the establishment of a new CWD management zone and surrounding surveillance area to better understand the distribution and prevalence of this disease in the area, as well as considerations of late season hunting, landowner shooting permits and targeted culling.

General information about CWD

Results of CWD tests completed thus far are available on the Minnesota DNR’s CWD test results webpage (mndnr.gov/cwdcheck). Additional test results for deer harvested in 2024 will be added to this webpage as they become available. The DNR will directly notify any hunter who harvests a deer that tests positive.

CWD is a fatal neurological disease that affects cervids, which include white-tailed deer, moose and elk, and has no known cure. It has been found in more than two-thirds of the states in the U.S. More information about CWD and what the DNR is doing to limit disease spread and protect the health of Minnesota’s white-tailed deer is available on the Minnesota DNR website (mndnr.gov/cwd).

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