

Now the bad news. Middle and West Tennessee deer are experiencing a severe outbreak of Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease or EHD. EHD is caused by a virus that is transmitted to deer by small biting insects called midges or no-seeums. Deer infected with EHD develop sores and severe swelling in their mouths, making eating and drinking difficult. According to the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency, EHD is a common disease among deer but poses no risk to humans. It does, however, typically kill about a third of the deer that contract it. The TWRA has produced a very good informational podcast about the disease. Click here to view it.

Both deer were found within 30 yards of water. I've been told that the severe drought this summer has aggravated the EHD outbreak by concentrating deer around water sources where the midges hatch. Even though both deer had obviously been dead for quite a while, neither had been seriously scavenged, which makes me believe that there must be lots of other opportunities for the buzzards and coyotes to fill their bellies. We could be in for a tough year...

Late 2007 Update: Reports from the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency were that over half the deer population in certain parts of middle Tennessee were lost to EHD. The photo above shows the cracked hooves of a buck that I killed during muzzle loader season. He was limping noticeably as he approached, so I assumed he had been injured. I wasn't until I field dressed him that I discovered he was uninjured except for the cracked hooves. I discovered later that this is typical of deer that survive an EHD infection.
Late 2007 Update: Reports from the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency were that over half the deer population in certain parts of middle Tennessee were lost to EHD. The photo above shows the cracked hooves of a buck that I killed during muzzle loader season. He was limping noticeably as he approached, so I assumed he had been injured. I wasn't until I field dressed him that I discovered he was uninjured except for the cracked hooves. I discovered later that this is typical of deer that survive an EHD infection.
The deer you killed with cracked hooves from EHD...did you eat it still?
ReplyDeleteI did. I was told by a TWRA biologist that the meat was safe to eat.
ReplyDeleteHi, thanks for this post. I just moved to middle TN. Do you know if EHD is still a big issue? Thanks!
ReplyDeleteJohn, EHD is always present in the deer herd, but it seldom reaches epidemic proportions like it did on 2007. Usually there are just small isolated outbreaks.
ReplyDelete