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Author Topic: Sick sheep shot  (Read 2596 times)

Offline boneaddict

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Sick sheep shot
« on: June 17, 2009, 06:48:11 AM »
Date: June 15, 2009
Contact: Mike Demick
(208) 799-5010



sick bighorn shot


An Idaho Fish and Game biologist Wednesday morning, June 10, shot a bighorn sheep along the Salmon River about 20 miles east of Riggins.

The seven-year-old radio-collared bighorn ram appeared ill and had been observed near a private domestic sheep ranch along the Salmon River. Officials feared it suffered from pneumonia, which is often fatal to wild sheep. It was killed after eluding authorities since May 18.

The sick ram had rejoined other bighorns a few miles upriver, but the ram was alone when it was shot.

Fish and Game biologists took blood and tissue samples from the dead bighorn. The samples will be processed at the Caine Veterinary Teaching and Research Center and the Fish and Game Wildlife Health Center in Caldwell. Results are expected in about two weeks.

The ram had been radio-collared in 2008, and blood and tissue samples taken then can be compared to the samples taken Wednesday.

Other sheep in the herd carry radio collars and will be monitored closely.




Offline SHANE(WA)

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Re: Sick sheep shot
« Reply #1 on: June 17, 2009, 07:16:04 AM »
Not good

Offline boneaddict

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Re: Sick sheep shot
« Reply #2 on: June 17, 2009, 08:07:51 AM »
If it eluded authorities since May, I wonder how sick it was...... also wonder just how many sheep were exposed in that month.   This could spell disaster to the Church.  Sorry Pope, your worst nightmare might be on the horizon.

Offline bucklucky

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Re: Sick sheep shot
« Reply #3 on: June 17, 2009, 08:11:46 AM »
That really sucks, Asotin all over again  :bash:

Offline jackelope

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Re: Sick sheep shot
« Reply #4 on: June 17, 2009, 08:21:35 AM »
pulling up a thread from the past....quote from doublelung...
Quote
Quote from: DOUBLELUNG on January 15, 2009, 07:39:26 PM
The epizootic pneumonia outbreaks in bighorn sheep are caused by Pasteurella haemolytica, which evolved with Old World sheep, and which is endemic in them (both wild and domestic species) and causes no major disease issues for them.  New World sheep lack exposure and immunity to P. haemolytica, and once exposed can remain dormant in individuals until they are stressed; then the disease breaks out, is highly infectious, and will kill 50-90+% of a bighorn herd.  So far, no bighorns have developed immunity, though after 140 years of exposure some are more resistant than others (that just means the outbreaks and die-offs are less frequent).  Outbreaks kill all sex and age classes.

A second cause is lungworm, also an Old World sheep disease, which also causes pneumonia.  In herds with lungworm, lambs will be born and adults aren't usually affected - but all or most lambs will die before winter.  Herds eventually blink out as the adults die and aren't replaced. 

So far, the only effective measure is spatial separation.  Even then, when subadult rams wander and disperse, they often come into contact domestic sheep or goats, and then present the danger they will bringthe infection to a bighorn herd.  Thus, most of not all wild sheep states' wildlife agencies have policies that bighorns that contact domestic sheep should be killed ASAP (or, in the case of WA, killed if they cannot be captured and quarantined). 

There's no state law against having domestic sheep in an occupied bighorn range, unfortunately.  Forest Service and BLM both have policies that are supposed to prevent commingling, but then politics creep into the mix.


*censored*ty deal...
http://hunting-washington.com/smf/index.php/topic,18217.0.html
:fire.:

" In today's instant gratification society, more and more pressure revolves around success and the measurement of one's prowess as a hunter by inches on a score chart or field photos produced on social media. Don't fall into the trap. Hunting is-and always will be- about the hunt, the adventure, the views, and time spent with close friends and family. " Ryan Hatfield

My posts, opinions and statements do not represent those of this forum

Offline BLKBEARKLR

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Re: Sick sheep shot
« Reply #5 on: June 17, 2009, 08:22:36 AM »
Bad deal all the way around, lets hope it was only this one
22 years 3 months and 4 days, happily retired from the U.S Army.


Offline Slider

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Re: Sick sheep shot
« Reply #6 on: June 17, 2009, 08:39:08 AM »
 :'( I will pray to the sheep gods!!!

Offline jager

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Re: Sick sheep shot
« Reply #7 on: June 17, 2009, 08:49:24 AM »
UI investigating researcher over bighorn study......

MOSCOW, Idaho — The University of Idaho has opened an investigation into whether one its researchers suppressed information that appears to link bighorn sheep getting deadly diseases directly from domestic sheep on open range.

Marie Bulgin is head of the university’s Caine Veterinary Teaching and Research Center and a past president of the Idaho Wool Growers Association.

She has testified before Idaho lawmakers and in federal court that there is no evidence bighorn sheep can get deadly diseases directly from domestic sheep on open range.

She says she didn’t know about a 1994 study conducted by scientists at the research center on two dead bighorns that shows a link but never resulted in a paper being published.

Bulgin supported a 2009 bill backed by the wool growers to keep sheep ranchers from losing federal grazing lands that are used by bighorns.



I had heard about the conflict of interest some time ago...guess it's ramping up now.

Offline chukarchaser

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Re: Sick sheep shot
« Reply #8 on: June 20, 2009, 08:26:06 AM »
Wasn't there a video or TVshow about this Marie gal spiting off her views on sheep?  I remember watching part of it somewhere and just getting totally pissed at her one sided science

 


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