Updated
Updated · wlf.louisiana.gov · Jun 4
Louisiana Ratifies 15-Mile CWD Zones as 55 Infected Deer Prompt New Hunting Rules
Updated
Updated · wlf.louisiana.gov · Jun 4

Louisiana Ratifies 15-Mile CWD Zones as 55 Infected Deer Prompt New Hunting Rules

2 articles · Updated · wlf.louisiana.gov · Jun 4

Summary

  • Louisiana's wildlife commission ratified an emergency declaration creating Chronic Wasting Disease management zones, replacing the former control-area framework after SCR 24 passed in the 2026 legislative session.
  • The zones use 5-mile and 15-mile boundaries around confirmed detections, and baiting or feeding will be allowed Sept. 1-March 31, 2027 only if the prior surveillance season meets sampling goals.
  • Apparent CWD prevalence of 2.5% to 20% will trigger a baiting ban for the following surveillance season, while new detections outside existing zones will require a new emergency declaration.
  • Deer carcasses generally cannot be exported from a management zone, though boned-out meat, cleaned skulls, hides, finished mounts and some taxidermy transfers are exempt.
  • Louisiana has found 55 CWD-positive deer since its first case in 2022, mostly in Tensas Parish; zones can be removed after three straight surveillance seasons with no detections and sampling goals met.

Insights

Louisiana's new plan allows deer baiting in CWD zones. Could this policy accelerate the very disease it aims to manage?
Are Louisiana's new zones and hunter incentives a proactive strategy or a temporary fix for an unstoppable wildlife disease?