Friday, 03 September 2010
 

 
 


Wild and Domestic Sheep Disease Workshops Main Page


Section 5:
A Review of Disease Related Conflicts Between Domestic Sheep and Goats and Bighorn Sheep. USFS Technical Report (link) new!
Section 6:

  • USAHA-BMP's and Clifford et al
  • LANDER -- The Bush administration is attempting to usurp wildlife
    management authority from Western states through an end-of-term,
    under-the-radar move on bighorn sheep, state officials and wildlife
    advocates charge...Read the full article (Jackson Hole Star-Tribune)
  •  

Section B:


Related Links:

  • Sheep Pasteurellosis News Release (PDF) - This report was developed for the Council of Agricultural Science and Technology and represents a consensus on the issue and agreement that contact between domestic sheep and bighorns is a risk factor for disease transmission and that seperation is a reasonable management tool. new!


WAFWA Wild Sheep Management Guildlines - In July of 2007 the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (WAFWA) adopted a set of guidelines for management of bighorn/domestic sheep disease conflicts. WAFWA represents the directors and State wildlife conservation agencies of 11 western states and their federal agency counterparts. These guidelines represent a set of collaboratively developed “best management practices” for wildlife and land managers, range land users and grazers and conservation organizations. Comments on this document will be considered when at the February 2008 workshop.

  • Progress on Cooperative Efforts to Manage Bighorn and Domestic Sheep/Goat Diseases
    Subsequent to the series of workshops that began in November 2006 agreements between wildlife and livestock groups in several States have been brokered. These documents acknowledge that there are disease transmission risks, that separation may be a useful tool, and that there is a general desire to work together and use good science as a guide. These agreements vary in content and complexity, but they appear to open the way to problem solving, progress and cooperation and are evidence that efforts to disseminate information may be working to bring about positive change.".
    Nevada
    --MOU Press Release
    --Memorandum of Agreement (full document)
    Wyoming
    --Wyoming Agreement

  • Payette Principles - These principles arose out of the November 2006 US Forest Service meeting in Boise, ID and were unanimously endorsed by a panel of experts that included both domestic livestock interests and wildlife interests. They may serve as common ground for future discussions and were reviewed and engendered little dissent at the April, 2007 Davis, CA workshop, although a formal to determine if there was consensus was not held.

  • Sierra Nevada Quantitative risk assessment; Quantitative risk assessment is a relatively new tool for assessing disease risk stemming from contact between bighorn and domestic sheep. It has the advantage of allowing one to vary contact related parameters and determine how changes in grazing and management activities may alter risk. They are more complicated and require more precise data than qualitative risk assessment and the one provided is specific to the Sierra Nevada Mountain populations of California.
Section D: Historic Literature
  • Foundational and Historic Literature- A list of 200 references pertinent to pneumonia in wild and domestic animals, pneumoina and other diseases of bighorn sheep, domestic sheep and goats courtesy of Dr. Mark Drew.


Last Updated ( Monday, 01 February 2010 )
 
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