RALEIGH, N.C. – The Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources recently released partial Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) Surveillance results for the 2021-22 hunting season. The report indicated that one deer harvested in Floyd Co. and one deer harvested in Montgomery Co. tested positive for CWD. This is the first time a CWD-positive deer has been found in Floyd Co. and it was harvested approximately 28.5 miles from the North Carolina border. This is just a few miles closer than the CWD-positive deer reported last year in Montgomery Co., which was 33 miles from the border.
Yesterday, officials with the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission met with State Veterinarian, Dr. Michael Martin, with the N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to review North Carolina’s CWD Response Plan and consider this new information.
The Wildlife Commission’s level of CWD surveillance was amplified in 2021 in response to Virginia’s first positive case reported in Montgomery Co. earlier that year. Special surveillance attention was given to the four North Carolina counties closest to that case: Alleghany, Rockingham, Stokes and Surry counties.
Commission staff confirmed that over 7,100 deer samples have been collected across the state since July of 2021, a substantial increase over the previous season. Test results have been received from approximately 50% of the samples, and thus far CWD has not been detected. Results from the remaining samples will be received in batches over the next few months. Once all the results are received, officials will determine next steps for continued monitoring and response.
“These new CWD-positive samples in Virginia really highlight the importance of our surveillance efforts here in North Carolina,” said Chris Kreh, assistant chief in the Wildlife Commission’s Wildlife Management Division. “We received a record number of deer samples from taxidermists, meat processers and hunters to bolster our ability to