It is unlawful to:
- Import, transport, or possess any portion of a cervid carcass originating from any state, territory, or foreign country into Mississippi.
- Transport any portion of a cervid carcass outside of an MDWFP-defined CWD Management Zone.
- Transport any portion of a cervid carcass outside of an MDWFP-defined CWD Management Zone from Arkansas or Louisiana lands east of the Mississippi River that lie within that zone.
This rule does not apply to:
- Meat from cervids that has been completely deboned, or bone-in quarters with no part of the spinal column or head attached.
- Antlers, antlers attached to cleaned skull plates or cleaned skulls where no tissue is attached to the skull.
- Cleaned teeth.
- Finished taxidermy and antler products.
- Hides and tanned products.
- Any portions of white-tailed deer originating from land outside of an MDWFP-defined CWD Management Zone between the Mississippi River levees in Arkansas and Louisiana.
- Hunters may only transport a deer head outside of a MDWFP-defined CWD Management Zone to a permitted taxidermist participating in the CWD collection program. A CWD sample number must be obtained from the participating taxidermist prior to transporting the deer head outside of the MDWFP-defined CWD Management Zone. This sample number must accompany the deer head while in transport and be available for inspection by Law Enforcement upon request. The deer head must be delivered to the participating taxidermist within 5 days of receiving the sample number. This does not apply to deer, elk, or other cervids harvested outside of Mississippi.
CWD Management Zones
North MS Management Zone
Includes all portions of Alcorn, Benton, Desoto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Prentiss, Tate, Tippah, Tishomingo and Union counties.
Only portions of Coahoma, Quitman, and Tunica counties defined as:
- Areas south of Highway 4;
- Areas east of Old Highway 61 to the intersection of Highway 49 (Lula);
- Areas east of Highway 49 to the intersection of Highway 278;
- Areas north of Highway 278; and
- Areas west of Highway 3.
Issaquena Management Zone
Only portions of Issaquena County defined as:
- All areas east of the Mississippi River
- All areas south of Highways 14
All portions of Warren and Claiborne County.
Harrison Management Zone
- All portions of Harrison County west of Hwy 49;
- All portions of Hancock County east of Highways 53, 603, and 43; and,
- All portions of Hancock County east of Nicholson Avenue.
*Harrison County Management Zone will be effective February 16, 2024.*
Regulations
1) Carcasses may not be transported outside of any CWD Management Zone. Research has shown that decomposed carcasses of infected animals can also contribute to transmission when prions bind to soil and plant material. Thus, movement of carcasses may introduce CWD into previously uninfected areas. Any harvested deer may be taken directly to a taxidermist or meat processor within the CWD Management Zone. Only the below products may leave the a zone:
- Cut/wrapped meat (commercially or privately)
- Deboned meat, or bone-in quarters with no part of the spinal column or head attached
- Hides with no head attached
- Finished taxidermy
- Antlers with no tissue attached
- Cleaned skull plates (no brain tissue)
- Cleaned skulls (no lymphoid or brain tissue)
- Hunters may only transport a deer head outside of a MDWFP-defined CWD Management Zone to a permitted taxidermist participating in the CWD collection program. A CWD sample number must be obtained from the participating taxidermist prior to transporting the deer head outside of the MDWFP-defined CWD Management Zone. This sample number must accompany the deer head while in transport and be available for inspection by Law Enforcement upon request. The deer head must be delivered to the participating taxidermist within 5 days of receiving the sample number. This does not apply to deer, elk, or other cervids harvested outside of Mississippi.
2) Supplemental feeding is banned in all CWD Management Zones (salt licks, mineral licks, and feeders). Direct contact with prions is the most effective means of transmitting CWD. Research indicates saliva may have the highest concentration of prions. Thus, to minimize concentration of deer and potential spread of CWD, supplemental feeding is banned within all CWD Management Zones.