
Help Keep New Hampshire Free from CWD
CONTACT:
Becky Fuda: (603) 744-5470
May 21, 2025
Concord, NH – New Hampshire’s white-tailed deer population once again showed no evidence of chronic wasting disease (CWD), based on monitoring data gathered during the 2024 hunting season. Chronic wasting disease is a neurological disorder that is always fatal to white-tailed deer, moose, and other cervids (members of the deer family). While there are no reported cases of CWD infection in humans, hunters are advised not to consume animals that have tested positive for CWD.
Chronic wasting disease was first identified in 1967 and remained isolated in Colorado and Wyoming for almost three decades. Since then, CWD has spread both within the US and internationally, and has been found as far east as New York and Quebec, bringing the disease far closer to New Hampshire’s borders. To date, CWD has been detected in wild or captive deer in a total of 36 states and 5 Canadian provinces as well as in South Korea, Norway, Sweden, and Finland.
Each deer season, Fish and Game biologists and staff from USDA Wildlife Services collect samples from hunter-harvested deer for CWD testing. Deer biologist Becky Fuda recently received results from a federally certified veterinary diagnostic laboratory indicating that all 404 deer sampled during the 2024 deer season tested negative for CWD. New Hampshire’s monitoring program is part of a nationwide effort to slow the spread of CWD. Since the monitoring program began in 2002, 8,981 deer have been tested in New Hampshire.
The NH Fish and Game Department is asking hunters to do their part in the effort to keep the state CWD-free by following state restrictions on importing carcasses from CWD-positive jurisdictions and not using natural urine-based deer lures.
“While it is good news that New Hampshire remains CWD-free, we are asking hunters to help our herd by not using natural urine-based deer lures when hunting because these products can potentially spread CWD,” said Fuda. Fish and Game recommends that hunters instead choose from among the many effective synthetic lures available today.
CWD is transmitted by an abnormal protein, also known as a prion. These abnormal proteins are very stable and may persist in the environment for several years, posing a risk to animals that come in contact with them. While most hunters use small amounts of these lures, continued applications can have cumulative effects over time.
Studies have shown these prions are found in nervous system tissue, lymph nodes, saliva, urine, and feces, among other places. Urine for natural lures is collected from captive deer facilities outside of New Hampshire, many of which are in states where CWD is present. In many cases, urine is collected from animals held in pens over grates, where a mixture of urine, feces and saliva accumulates. The liquid is then strained out.
“Deer urine is not a regulated industry or product, and these lures do not undergo any quality control or treatment that might inactivate or kill disease-causing agents,” said Fuda.
Because of these risk factors, Fish and Game strongly discourages the use of natural urine-based deer lures while hunting. Several states and Canadian provinces have already banned the use and possession of natural urine-based lures. Evidence also suggests lures are not as effective as marketing campaigns would make hunters believe. A survey conducted by the Pennsylvania Game Commission found that hunters who used urine lures were no more successful in harvesting a deer than hunters who did not.
Hunters who make hunting trips to CWD-positive jurisdictions are reminded that they must follow the mandatory regulations on bringing home deer, elk, moose, or other cervid carcasses from CWD-positive jurisdictions to help keep New Hampshire CWD-free. You may legally bring back ONLY deboned meat, antlers, upper canine teeth, hides, or capes with no part of the head attached, and finished taxidermy mounts. Antlers attached to skull caps or canine teeth must have all soft tissue removed.
Help our herd—to see a map of CWD-positive jurisdictions, and find web resources about how you can help keep New Hampshire CWD-free, visit https://www.wildlife.nh.gov/wildlife-and-habitat/wildlife-related-diseases/deer-diseases.


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