Remember this: Think safety first. No wild game animal is
worth death. Besides, who is going to take care of your family?
When hunting participants go afield, they are resolute on
the job at hand to procure meat and being happy at the prospect of getting out in
nature, bonding with others, or finding private time for thoughts and actions.
Taking care of the necessary safety precautions that go
along with an outdoor sport, especially one that involves a tool such as a gun, there are unforeseen and imminent dangers that can’t really be planned for. These
imminent dangers could be in the minuteness of mucus or body wastes excreted
from wildlife upon handling. This will be the focus of the following conversation. As a thoughtful and discerning huntress, I
thought to give an inspection of facts or thoughts on how contamination of disease
through wild game contact could affect the hunting participants, personally and the
sport itself. I do not want to carry a Hazmat suite around with me
where ever I go.
Disease transference should always be figured into the
safety precautions of the hunting participant. Disease contamination by wild
game can take a period of germination before symptoms are immediate.
Death is not reversible and disease can disable you the rest of your life.
A main opportunity for harm to befall a hunting participant is the moment when the hunting participant comes in contact with the environment and the wild animals that
occupy that space.
When hiking the terrain to find the honey spot, where would-be game browse, there is always the opportunity to look around while noting
potential sources of disease, such as dead animal carcasses that seem otherwise
not out the ordinary. At no point, should
you handle a dead carcass. These findings can be reported to the local
Department of Natural Resources if you reside in the United States. These
agencies should have special training for handing potential biological hazards.
With respect for foreign countries, look
for local agencies that are available.
Ecosystems persist through a form of self-regulation but the
activities of modern man, such as agriculture, urbanization, and product
resource extraction with limited replacement, have a varying degree of impact
depending on location and excess. Unstable ecosystems in flux may at times
generate a pathogen in mass, given the conditions are right, that can break out
in a wild game population or jump from one infected animal to a completely
different species based on mutation and opportunity.
What does a hunting participant do when they are presented with
a potential life threatening hazard that could be translated to a public
domain?
The discerning huntress/hunter should always keep this in mind
in the event of possible exposure:
·
Do not touch dead animals, approach aggressive
animals, or near death animals.
·
Keep current on scientific data based around the
specific game you hunt but always know a little about all kinds of wild game.
·
Know the early signs of wildlife zoonotic
infections that are dangers to the huntress/hunter.
·
Learn practical advice by contacting your State
Wildlife Agencies for current literature or speak to a wildlife biologist that
is employed for this specific purpose.
·
Learn different techniques in handling wounded,
dead or compromised wild game to reduce exposure. Wear goggles, gloves, or
mask. You never know what it might be because that is the stealth of disease.
Disease can be almost invisible it is so small or unassuming.
·
Know which domesticated animals can cross
contaminate wild game or vice versa.
·
Do not be afraid to reach out to Wildlife
biologists. Veterinarians are great but limit their knowledge over time with
the practice they participate in unless you specifically utilize a Wildlife
Veterinarian.
·
Compare notes with other hunting participants.
·
Climate Change
·
Human population explosions
·
Global Human Travel
·
Wildlife Trade (legal and illegal)
·
Changes in land-use patterns
·
Deforestation where previous isolated wild game
are now exposed.
·
Hunting Tourism
·
Always keep the body or find the animal before it
wanders off. Having the reservoir of disease is the best evidence against pin
pointing what disease is actually present.
·
Wash your hands; cover your mouth, nose, wounds
and eyes, which are potential portals of infection. Change your clothes and wash
them or trash bag them. The clothes might need to be burned if no longer useful
to you or a doctor.
·
Immediately go to a hospital or present yourself
to a health care provider if physical damage has been done to your person or if
symptoms suddenly appear. Even if you feel like you are bothering someone----do
yourself a favor and irritate them until you are seen. It might save your life
or someone else’s. Be safe not dead and stupid. Always keep in mind that not
everyone sees the gravity of a situation until several more people are infected
or exposed.
·
Get proper treatment and follow that treatment.
If there is a side effect of prescribed treatment refer back to your attending
physician.
Potential diseases hunting participants contact, on terrain when
either field dressing or interacting in close quarters with wild game or
animals, should be explored:
- Rabies: Any animal that acts sick, at times aggressive but can look listless and ‘dumb’.
- Tularemia: Cottontail rabbits, black-tailed rabbits, snowshoe hares, beaver, and muskrat.
- Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome-dead animal bodies, deer mice, rodents.
- Psittacosis: Waterfowl, herons, and pigeons which are the most affected but not limited to other species of avian. Can also be upland game birds, shorebirds, gulls, terns, and songbirds.
- Good Ole Plague: fleas from rodents
- Baylisascaris: Raccoon parasite; Potential source is sitting at the base of a tree while turkey hunting where the raccoon would pass his feces.
- Encephalitits; deer, birds, rodents and variety of mosquitos.
- Alveolar Echinococcosis caused by tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis. Hosts: Red Fox, Arctic Fox, coyotes.
- West Nile for anyone going into a mosquito ridden country as a tourist hunter. If you are a huntress/hunter/ trapper should wear gloves when handling or cleaning animals. Cook meat thoroughly.
- Tick-borne disease; Rickettsia ricketsii, Babesia, Lyme disease, Erhlichia chaffeensis (white tail deer), Borrelia burgdorferi, and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever.
- Pseudomonas; any animal where mucus secretions exist.
- Salmonella-waterfowl
- Escherichia coli
- enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli-ruinants
- Trichinella
After reviewing these points in brief, we soon discover there is more to be conscious of when going afield. Once again as a public servant, the hunting participant acts as a potential first contact to a landscape, and observations that could potentially waylay an outbreak of disease to animals or humans. While afield, one must keep their wits about them. Do not take what is perceived as harmless death via Mother Nature and move it to one of potential threat to wildlife and human populations. As humans, we get too comfortable in our own mortality. Neither do we want to live in fear. Being a proactive sportsman, a public servant, and being responsible by self-educating ourselves as adults that hunt with current literature, seminars, and contacting agencies, will help avoid unassuming moments of relative ease that can turn into nights in a hospital bed fighting for your life.
*cough, you know who you are*
As a
huntress that loves to prudently hunt, I feel being a public servant to remind
other hunting participants of potential threats, is one of the best day’s business
I could do for free.
Written by: W Harley Bloodworth
~Courtesy of the AOFH~