Title: Re: OFF: elk and deer disease from Beborah Bryon
Allan,
last year or was it early this year in researching on  organophosphates (sp?) role in MCD.
There was a great deal of info on the web on death & destruction in Michigan forest lands to the deer herds for spraying of these pesticides in the timber production ranges (read row cropping trees). So I don't have the mins at this time to look.

My dowes does give credence to organophosphate interaction in screwing up prions important scavenging role in flesh bodies.

Love & Light
with complex carbon rings
Markess

From: Allan Balliett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2001 15:18:47 -0500
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Fwd: OFF: elk and deer disease from Beborah Bryon


>Status:  U
>Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2001 13:48:07 -0500
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>From: bdnow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: OFF: elk and deer disease from Beborah Bryon
>
>
>                 Kansas elk found with brain-damaging
>disease               USA: December 13, 2001                 TOPEKA,
>Kan. - Kansas officials have determined that
>                 a captive Kansas elk has tested positive for a disease
>                 similar to mad cow, spurring concerns that the illness
>                 could spread among the state's wildlife.
>The disclosure comes a week after Nebraska officials said
>                 that four whitetail deer had tested positive for chronic
>
>                 wasting disease. The fatal ailment damages portions of
>the
>                 brain and is similar to bovine spongiform encephalopathy
>
>                 (BSE) or mad cow disease, which has been found in cattle
>
>                 in Europe.                 More than 100 people in
>Europe have died from a human
>                 variant of mad cow disease.                 "This is not
>a time for panic, but it is a time for
>                 precautions," Lloyd Fox, a biologist with the Kansas
>                 Department of Wildlife and Parks, told Reuters in an
>                 interview. "There is so much unknown about this series
>of
>                 disease."                 Officials said the captive
>herd exposed to the infected elk
>                 has been quarantined and will likely be killed. The
>single elk
>                 that has so far tested positive was shipped into Kansas
>                 from a Colorado herd.                 Chronic wasting is
>a spongiform disease affecting mule
>                 deer, white-tailed deer and elk. It has been identified
>in wild
>                 deer and elk in northeastern Colorado, southeastern
>                 Wyoming and southwestern Nebraska.
>Though uncommon, the disease appears to be increasing in
>                 the United States, according to health and wildlife
>officials,
>                 who say they know little about how it is transmitted or
>how
>                 long an infected area remains contaminated even after
>the
>                 sick animal is removed.                 In October, the
>Colorado Department of Agriculture said it
>                 would destroy about 1,450 ranch-raised elk that may have
>
>                 been exposed to chronic wasting disease.
>The disease is in the same family of fatal brain-wasting
>                 ailments as mad cow disease. Unlike mad cow, however,
>                 CWD has not been linked to human illness. CWD has been
>                 present in U.S. deer and elk for decades, mostly in
>                 Western states.                 The U.S. Department of
>Agriculture said on Sept. 27 it had
>                 authorized $2.6 million for a CWD surveillance and
>                 indemnity program.                 REUTERS NEWS
>SERVICE


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