Free: Contests & Raffles.
I wonder what the danger is that range cattle will become infected with the wolf tape worm causing the destruction of the entire herd? (think mad cow) Then the range area shut down permanently due to wolf tape worm contamination in the soil.
Quote from: KFhunter on March 24, 2014, 04:22:49 PMI wonder what the danger is that range cattle will become infected with the wolf tape worm causing the destruction of the entire herd? (think mad cow) Then the range area shut down permanently due to wolf tape worm contamination in the soil.http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs377/en/Like slim and none, unless Americans suddenly have a penchant for eating offal.
If i remeber correctly your standard de wormer does nothing forthis tape worm... It requires a special dose that is on the expensive side something like $100 per dose...
"slim and none" might be optimistic.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23632259
Cystic echinococcosis is a preventable disease as it involves domestic animal species as definitive and intermediate hosts. Periodic deworming of dogs, improved hygiene in the slaughtering of livestock (including proper destruction of infected offal), and public education campaigns have been found to lower and, in high income countries, prevent transmission and alleviate the burden of human disease. Vaccination of sheep with an E. granulosus recombinant antigen (EG95) offers encouraging prospects for prevention and control. Small-scale EG95 vaccine trials in sheep indicate high efficacy and safety with vaccinated lambs not becoming infected with E. granulosus. A programme combining vaccination of lambs, deworming of dogs and culling of older sheep could lead to elimination of cystic echinococcosis disease in humans in less than 10 years.
Does MN have much for open range, or a cattle industry?
My main concern is regarding the potential spread of Echinococcosis granulosus (E. granulosus) throughout the west and onto rural residences and ranches by these wide ranging wolves that cross between states and countries on a regular basis and the failure of most agencies involved to adequately warn hunters and ranchers so that we can all take measures to protect ourselves
Quote from: bearpaw on March 24, 2014, 11:05:44 AMMy main concern is regarding the potential spread of Echinococcosis granulosus (E. granulosus) throughout the west and onto rural residences and ranches by these wide ranging wolves that cross between states and countries on a regular basis and the failure of most agencies involved to adequately warn hunters and ranchers so that we can all take measures to protect ourselvesGood grief Dale, there have been tapeworms in Washington for forever. Most every dog that used to run free would get them. It's not like tapeworms are rare here and wolves brought them here. The tens of thousands of coyotes and raccoons have spread them to every place imaginable in the state and then there are the intermediate hosts like deer and elk and rabbits. Where ever they are there are probably tapeworms too. This might be the dumbest reason of all to hate wolves.
Quote from: KFhunter on March 24, 2014, 04:31:35 PM"slim and none" might be optimistic.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23632259Maybe not....QuoteCystic echinococcosis is a preventable disease as it involves domestic animal species as definitive and intermediate hosts. Periodic deworming of dogs, improved hygiene in the slaughtering of livestock (including proper destruction of infected offal), and public education campaigns have been found to lower and, in high income countries, prevent transmission and alleviate the burden of human disease. Vaccination of sheep with an E. granulosus recombinant antigen (EG95) offers encouraging prospects for prevention and control. Small-scale EG95 vaccine trials in sheep indicate high efficacy and safety with vaccinated lambs not becoming infected with E. granulosus. A programme combining vaccination of lambs, deworming of dogs and culling of older sheep could lead to elimination of cystic echinococcosis disease in humans in less than 10 years. It's not even remotely the same thing as Mad Cow Disease, and if it can be potentially eliminated in a third world country in 10 years I don't see it suddenly becoming a major conern in the US, given that it's been around for many years.
I find it interesting that people on here are working so hard to make it sound like this tapeworm is no big deal, nothing really. If it was stray house cats spreading it instead of wolves they would have a different point of view. This whole debate just points out once again what a "special animal" wolves are to some people. When I read this my conclusion is, there may have been some of these things around, but in 50 years of hunting, dressing, and butchering elk and deer, a portion of those years as a hunting guide during which my clients killed 8 to 12 elk and around 15 deer per year, I never heard of cysts in the animals. Some of my guiding was done just north of Gardiner in Montana and involved hunting elk from the Yellowstone herd. Now that the introduced wolves showed up, guess what they are spreading. Way to go wolf introduction folks, you get another gold award for your environmental stewardship. City people irritate me. By the way, in the middle to late 80's we repeatedly saw wolf tracks on the trails around Ramshorn Peak in Tom Miner basin. We also saw wolves in winter chasing Bighorn Sheep on a ridge we called "round patch" on the south side of Tom Miner Basin. I and the people I worked and hunted with have no problem differentiating between wolves, dogs and coyotes in case somebody brings that up. Somehow nobody talked about that when it was time to reintroduce. Politics and special interests again I imagine. I wish they would use their money and political influence for something productive.