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Manitoba

Western Manitoba lab tracks SARS-CoV-2 in white-tailed deer with help from hunters

In a small laboratory in Dauphin's industrial district, deer heads thaw on the floor. The heads represent samples submitted as part of the provincial surveillance program for chronic wasting disease in deer, but technicians are also testing for SARS-CoV-2.

Samples sent to chronic wasting disease surveillance program being swabbed for virus that causes COVID-19

A man sticks a swab in the nose of a white-tail deer carcass' head.
A technician performs a COVID-19 test at a wildlife laboratory in Dauphin, Man. (Gavin Boutroy/Radio-Canada)

In a small laboratory in Dauphin's industrial district, deer heads thaw on the floor.

Those heads are submitted as part of the provincial surveillance program for chronic wasting disease in deer, but for the past couple years, technicians in the western Manitoba city have been probing the inside of the deer's nostrils and throatsto testfor SARS-CoV-2.

Richard Davis, a biologist with Manitoba Conservation and the province's wildlife health program manager, is in charge of the program for preventing disease from impacting wildlife populations in Manitoba.

He said after a U.S. jurisdiction started testing for the virus that causes COVID-19in white-tailed deer samples, Environment and Climate Change Canada initiated a study across the country askingagencies like the one in Manitobato start testing deer for the virus.

Davis said his team sent in 300 swabs last year, andthree confirmed SARS-CoV-2for a positivity rateofone per cent.

Viles filled with nasal swabs.
Samples from COVID-19 tests performed on deer in Manitoba at a wildlife laboratory in Dauphin. (Gavin Boutroy/Radio-Canada)

"It's surprising because ... the type of COVID that was in the deer was the alpha variant, delta variant and a third variant that was only seen in the UK," Davis said.

"Scientists and researchers are really wondering what's going on there, and of course the concern is if it becomes endemic in the deer, are they going to pass it people."

About 50 SARS-CoV-2infections have been detectedin deeracross the country since October 2020, with Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia leading the way.

A map showing hot spots in Canada where deer have tested positive for coronavirus.
Manitoba has produced just three COVID-positive tests among deer in the past two years, but it's still surprising, says wildlife biologist Richard Daniels. (Gavin Boutroy/Radio-Canada)

These infections could potentially have repercussions for humans, so researchers are taking advantage of the hunting season to monitor the situation.That includes Jennifer Provencher,a research scientist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, who is based at the National Wildlife Research Centre in Ottawa.

"I think just emphasizing the contribution and the collaboration with those hunters ... for these programsto ensure that deer are healthy and accessible, I think is just really an important point," she said.

Earlier in the COVID-19 pandemic, animalssuch as cats and dogscontracted the virus from their family homes andother people they came into contact with, Provencher said.

That data pushed Environment and Climate Change Canadaalong with provincial and territorial partnersinto thinking about which other speciesthe virus causing COVID-19 could also be transferred to.

"Can it get into deer? Can it get into birds? This was work that we undertook a lot with partners who were on the ground, catching and trapping and tagging animals for other management purposes," Provencher said.

Two animals run in an open field.
White-tailed deer chase each other in a field north of Winnipeg. (Gavin Boutroy/Radio-Canada)

The highest risk to getting or being exposed to SARS CoV-2 two is still from human-to-humaninteraction, but there are many animals that have interactions with humans. That's where Provencher started to look at animals in the wild.

She says biologists like Davis have tested white-tailed deer, mule deer, elk and moose, and they've foundthat white-tailed deer and mule deer have been shown to be exposed or have SARS-CoV-2 matching what Provencher's colleagues in the U.S. have found.

The positivity rate is less than five per cent in most areas, she said, but that is over a sampling period of two to three years.

In Manitoba, the western border accounts for most of the sampling because it's part of a screening program to see if chronic wasting diseaseis entering the province.

"It's representative probably of that region. It's probably not representative of the whole province," Provencher said.

A lady with helmet climbs alongside a cliff.
Jennifer Provencher is a research scientist with Environment and Climate Change Canada. She is based at the National Wildlife Research Centre in Ottawa. (Submitted by Jennifer Provencher)

And just because SARS-CoV-2doesn't appear to have any negative effects on deer, it doesn't mean it's not having an effect, she said.

"There's still potential ways it could be reducing survival. It could be reducing fertility. There's lots of reasons why a disease can actually affect an animal," Provencher said.

Virusesthatcirculate in animals can also act as a reservoir, and there is the possibility the virus continues to evolve.

"That's still a big question mark for us. And so we don't know ifdeer, in particular in North America, will continue to have this virus actually circulate and become apool of viruses that could spill back into humans," she said.

"There's a spill back in humans that can actuallychange the disease dynamics against humans. We don't see that yet, but by tracking the deer population in their SARS-CoV-2, we can see if that's happening."

With files from Gavin Boutroy