Mon Feb 5, 6:41 PM ET
The new, single-dose birth
control vaccine would neutralize sex hormones in the famously fertile and
polygamous animals. It would result in infertility in both males and females.
"It's not something you
want anyone or everyone to use," said Dale Garner, wildlife bureau chief
at the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. "We want to make sure it's
not used willy-nilly in the state."
In order to do that, there's
a bill before the state Legislature aimed at regulating wildlife
contraceptives. The proposed legislation would also restrict the use of growth
hormones in deer, as well as drugs for sedating animals or treating them for
disease.
The contraceptive vaccine,
called GonaCon, is being developed by researchers at
the
The EPA wouldn't likely
approve the drug until early 2008, making it the first wildlife contraceptive
available for nonresearch purposes.
Researchers say the vaccine,
a protein, shouldn't be dangerous for people to eat meat from a vaccinated
deer. However, Garner worries about what could happen if people are
accidentally injected with the drug.
"What if some people in
a neighborhood get a deer down ... and it's kicking or takes a side step or a
roll and some guy or lady gets injected in the rear end?" he said.
"Or if somebody's shooting a dart gun at deer in a park,
and it misses an animal and hits a person? Or if a kid picks up an unspent dart
and the injection goes off?"
Use of wildlife contraception
in
Garner said it could cost
anywhere from $300 to $1,000 to capture and inject each deer with the vaccine,
adding that its effect lasts only two years.
____
On the Net:
Iowa Department of Natural
Resources: http://www.iowadnr.com/
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