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Xplor reconnects kids to nature and helps them find adventure in their own backyard. Free to residents of Missouri.
A monthly publication about conservation in Missouri. Started in 1938, the printed magazine is free to residents of Missouri.
WEST PLAINS, Mo. – In its ongoing search to determine where Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) exists in the state and to provide opportunities for hunters to have their deer tested for the disease, the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) is offering voluntary deer head drop-off opportunities at select sites around the state.
CWD is a neurological disease fatal to deer. Each year, mandatory sample collection from deer harvested in select counties found within MDC’s CWD Management Zone takes place during opening weekend of the November firearms deer season. This large-scale two-day sample collection effort will take place again this year on Nov. 16-17.
MDC also offers voluntary CWD sampling opportunities for hunters who harvest deer at any time during any of Missouri’s deer hunting seasons. Additional sampling opportunities include MDC offices, cooperating taxidermists and meat processors, and self-service freezers.
In south-central Missouri, these voluntary sampling sites fall into three categories.
MDC Offices: The MDC office listed below as voluntary sampling locations typically can accommodate sampling during normal business hours. However, hunters are encouraged to call in advance to ensure staff are available for collecting samples.
Non-MDC Sampling Partners: Each year, MDC partners with taxidermists and meat processors to offer hunters additional locations to have their deer sampled for CWD. Availability and hours vary so hunters should call these locations in advance before taking their deer or deer head for sampling.
Freezer head-drop locations: These sites feature self-serve freezers. Hunters are responsible for packing their deer heads and filling out an information tag. Directions, packing supplies, and tags will be available at these locations.
An interactive map showing all voluntary CWD testing drop-off sites throughout the state can be found at https://short.mdc.mo.gov/ZCH.
Hunters should cut off the deer head (and antlers for any bucks) while leaving about six inches of neck attached before coming to the drop-off site. Hunters can use the data sheets, zip ties and trash bags available at the freezer sites to label and bag the heads.
Hunters will need to record their name and contact information, as well as their Telecheck ID number and the location where the deer was harvested. Hunters can leave the deer head in the freezer and MDC staff will collect the heads and pull samples that will be submitted for testing.
Hunters will be able to check the results online using their Telecheck ID number from their hunting permit within 2-4 weeks. MDC will notify hunters directly if their sample returns a positive result. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) does not recommend consuming meat from a deer that has tested positive for CWD.
These voluntary freezer sites will not be available for use during the opening weekend of the November portion of the firearms deer season (Nov. 16-17) in counties where mandatory CWD sampling is required. (This includes Dent, Douglas, Oregon, Phelps, and Shannon counties.) On opening weekend of the November portion, hunters who harvest deer in mandatory CWD sampling counties are required, by regulation, to take their harvested deer (or its head) to an MDC staffed mandatory sampling location. Information about mandatory sampling locations and procedures can be found in the “2024 Fall Deer & Turkey” booklet that is available at all MDC offices, most locations that sell hunting and fishing permits, or at:
https://mdc.mo.gov/hunting-trapping/species/deer/chronic-wasting-disease/mandatory-cwd-sampling.
Since CWD was first detected in Missouri’s wild deer in 2012, there have been 572 positive tests found in the state. More than 280,000 tissue samples have been collected from wild deer since MDC began CWD surveillance in 2002. From the outset, hunters have played an important role in helping MDC monitor and track the disease in the state by their assistance with sample collection.
More information about CWD in Missouri can be found at mdc.mo.gov/CWD.