The government is us; we are the government, you and I. -Theodore Roosevelt
1967: Wasting syndrome observed in captive mule deer at a Colorado wildlife research facility.
1975−81: Wasting syndrome observed in Toronto Zoo mule deer that came from the Denver Zoo
1978: “Chronic wasting disease” (CWD) diagnosed as transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE)
1979: Recognized in captive mule deer at Wyoming wildlife research facility
1981: Detected in wild elk in Colorado
1985: Detected in wild mule deer in Colorado and Wyoming
1996: Detected in a captive elk farm in Saskatchewan; 38 other linked farms eventually found positive
1997: Detected in captive elk facilities in South Dakota
1998: Detected in captive elk facilities in Montana and Oklahoma: Model Program for Surveillance, Control, and Eradication of CWD in Domestic Elk presented at US Animal Health Association to establish monitoring and control standards
1999: World Health Organization indicates no evidence CWD is transmissible to humans, but advises that exposure should be avoided nonetheless
2000: Detected in wild mule deer in Nebraska and Saskatchewan: Research: molecular studies compare host ranges for CWD, scrapie, and bovine spongiform encephalopathy prions; environmental contamination and subclinical infection contribute to transmission; prevalence estimates in wild populations in Colorado and Wyoming
2001: Detected in captive elk in Kansas : Detected in captive elk in South Korea imported from Saskatchewan: Detected in wild white-tailed deer in South Dakota: USDA declares CWD emergency in captive elk; funds available for disease control
2002: Detected in captive elk in Minnesota, captive white-tailed deer in Alberta, and wild and captive white-tailed deer in Wisconsin: Detected in wild white-tailed deer in Illinois, mule deer in New Mexico, and elk in South Dakota: Joint CWD Task Force of USDA/DOI/States/Universities develops Plan for Assisting States, Federal Agencies, and Tribes in Managing CWD in Wild and Captive Cervids (National CWD Plan): Colorado establishes guidelines to minimize transport of high risk carcass materials: 1st International CWD Symposium (Denver, Colorado): Research: tonsil biopsy as a live animal test; improved high-throughput diagnostics
2003: Detected in wild mule deer in Utah: APHIS funds available for CWD work in captive and wild cervids (through 2011): USDA publishes Proposed Rule for CWD herd certification and interstate shipping program (HCP) to eradicate CWD from captive white-tailed deer and elk: Research: horizontal transmission of CWD likely important in CWD epidemiology
2004: Detected in wild elk in New Mexico : National CWD Plan progress report published and new priorities discussed: Research: environmental sources, decomposed carcasses can contribute to transmission
2005: Detected in captive and wild white-tailed deer in New York, wild mule deer in Alberta, moose in Colorado, and white-tailed deer in West Virginia
2006: Detected in captive white-tailed deer in Minnesota and wild white-tailed deer in Kansas: USDA publishes CWD HCP Final Rule – never implemented: Research: prions in muscles of infected deer; transmitted in saliva and blood
2007: Research: prions in environment more infective in particular (clay) soil types
2008: Detected in captive white-tailed deer in Michigan, wild elk in Saskatchewan, and moose in Wyoming: Research: CWD may be a plausible explanation for local deer population declines in Colorado
2009: APHIS plans to withdraw 2006 CWD Final Rule, issue a new rule based on 2006 rule and 2009 proposed rule: Research: prions shed in feces from deer in early stages of CWD; prions in urine and saliva
2010: Detected in captive white-tailed deer in Missouri and wild white-tailed deer in North Dakota and Virginia
2011: Detected in wild white-tailed deer in Maryland and Minnesota: Severe reduction of USDA funds for CWD work
2012: Detected in captive white-tailed deer in Iowa and Pennsylvania, wild white-tailed deer in Missouri, and wild mule deer in west Texas: APHIS Interim Final Rule for CWD Herd Certification and Interstate Movement and CWD Program Standards published: Research: possible link between scrapie and CWD
2013: Detected in wild white-tailed deer in Pennsylvania
2014: Detected in captive white-tailed deer in Ohio : CWD Program Standards revised: APHIS CWD Final Rule implemented: Research: plants may play role in CWD transmission and environmental maintenance; experimental aerosol transmission in white-tailed deer
2015: Detected in wild white-tailed deer in Michigan and captive white-tailed deer in Texas: Research: plants can bind prions superficially and uptake prions from contaminated soil
2016: Detected in wild elk and white-tailed deer in Arkansas: Detected in a wild reindeer in Norway: CWD found in two wild moose and a free-ranging reindeer in Norway
"The wildlife and its habitat cannot speak. So we must and we will."
-Theodore Roosevelt