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Causes of mortality in farmed white-tailed deer in the midwestern United States, 2004-2023.

Amanda C SmithKeiichi KurokiRosalie A IerardiLauren E DelaneyTamara B GullAnthony J OgunbadewaLoren G Schultz
Published in: Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc (2024)
Farmed cervids are of growing economic importance in the midwestern United States. Although diseases of wild and captive cervids have been examined in more northerly climates, little information exists on the health challenges of deer in the Midwest. We characterized and summarized the causes of mortality in farmed white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus ) submitted to the University of Missouri Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory (Columbia, MO, USA) over a 19-y period (2004-2023). Of 388 cases examined, 253 (65%) were carcasses submitted for autopsy, and 135 (35%) cases were tissue samples harvested by field veterinarians. Infectious disease was the most common cause of mortality ( n  = 335; 86.3%). Of infectious causes, primary pneumonia was most common ( n  = 140; 41.7%), followed by septicemia ( n  = 68; 20.1%), and primary enteritis ( n  = 64; 19.1%). Viruses were detected in 18% of pneumonia cases. The most common non-infectious diagnoses were emaciation and trauma (both 4 each; 1%). Thirteen animals (3.4%) died of unknown causes. Forty-nine percent of cases were juvenile deer <1-y-old. Most cases were received in the summer (212; 54.6%). Infectious diseases, particularly bacteria and viruses, pose a significant health challenge to farmed deer in the midwestern United States.
Keyphrases
  • infectious diseases
  • healthcare
  • cardiovascular events
  • public health
  • mental health
  • health information
  • risk factors
  • cardiovascular disease
  • intensive care unit
  • climate change
  • genetic diversity
  • risk assessment