Province of British Columbia Announces January Deer Hunt Near Cranbrook to Monitor Chronic Wasting Disease
British Columbia is scheduling a special deer hunt from January 5 to 31, 2026, around Cranbrook aimed at gathering additional samples to track the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD).
The hunting opportunity is open to anyone holding a valid B.C. hunting license along with appropriate tags for whitetail and mule deer within a specific zone near Cranbrook, detailed in the province’s online hunting regulations.
Additional Deer Harvest Allowed to Support Disease Surveillance
Hunters in the designated Cranbrook area will be permitted to harvest one extra deer beyond the usual regional bag limit of two, but only during this January hunt.
This extension applies to both antlered and antlerless mule deer and white-tailed deer, reflecting a targeted approach to sampling diverse deer demographics for disease monitoring.
Role of Hunters in Managing Chronic Wasting Disease
Provincial wildlife authorities emphasize that hunters are essential partners in controlling CWD through their participation and submission of harvested animals for testing.
By reducing local deer densities, this initiative intends to decrease disease transmission risks and remove potentially infected individuals from the population.
Wildlife Impact and Community Significance
According to provincial estimates, fewer than 1% of deer in the affected Cranbrook region carry CWD. Nevertheless, lowering deer numbers aims to safeguard wildlife health, preserve hunting opportunities, and protect cultural, recreational, and subsistence uses of deer.
About Chronic Wasting Disease and Regional Prevalence
Chronic Wasting Disease is a fatal neurodegenerative illness affecting cervids such as mule deer, white-tailed deer, elk, moose, and caribou. The current Cranbrook area cluster marks a concerning hotspot for the disease’s presence in B.C.
The first provincial CWD detections occurred in 2023, with positive samples from a hunter harvest in South Country and a roadkill case south of Cranbrook. All six confirmed cases to date originate from the Kootenay region.
Ongoing Surveillance and Management Efforts
- Most CWD-positive findings have resulted from voluntary hunter harvest submissions.
- Additional cases were identified after a targeted cull of urban deer in Cranbrook earlier in 2025 to assess infection levels in city populations.
- Mandatory testing protocols are enforced for deer, elk, and moose heads in management units 4-1 through 4-8 and 4-20 through 4-25.
- Transport restrictions have been placed on carcasses of these species moving outside the designated units to limit disease spread.
Expert Perspective on Disease Control Strategy
Reducing local deer density through regulated harvest is a strategic wildlife management tool to mitigate Chronic Wasting Disease transmission, given the prion’s persistence in environments and contagion through direct contact.
Targeting both antlered and antlerless individuals during this January hunt provides a more comprehensive sampling across age and sex classes, critical for understanding disease dynamics.
This adaptive management approach underscores the collaborative role of hunters and wildlife officials in sustaining healthy cervid populations while protecting ecological and community resources.
Additional reporting and sources from: B.C. implements January deer hunt around Cranbrook due to wasting disease – Nanaimo News Bulletin