Manitoba Natural Resources and Northern Development is taking additional management actions to help prevent the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in the province.
CWD is an incurable, fatal disease that affects members of the deer family (cervids) including white-tailed deer, mule deer, elk, moose and caribou. Animals infected with CWD may appear healthy until the later stages of the disease and while CWD is not known as a human health risk, meat from a CWD-infected animal is not recommended for consumption.
CWD was first detected in Manitoba in 2021 in five mule deer along the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border. The Province says if the disease spreads and becomes endemic to Manitoba, there is a serious risk that CWD will threaten the health of all cervid populations in Manitoba.
To help prevent the spread of CWD, the harvested cervid mandatory sample submission zone has been expanded, and a strictly regulated and managed mule deer hunting season has been established in defined areas along the western and southern borders of Manitoba.