Record warmth, open slopes give Wyoming’s fed elk a reprieve from advancing deadly disease
Apr 10, 2026
A historically mild winter has left Wyoming rangelands starved of snowmelt, and forage for wildlife is setting up to be sparse, parched and prone to catching fire.
But in the short term, animals survived what’s typically the hardest season of the year with relative ease. And there were some si
lver linings.
“It was a great winter for elk, and I would say it was a great winter for disease,” said Ben Wise, a wildlife disease biologist for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department’s Jackson Region.
Wildlife managers like Wise had been bracing for the continued advances of chronic wasting disease into the state’s six hay-reliant elk herds. Relatively few elk congregated over hay during the winter, however, and many feedgrounds didn’t operate at all. Moreover, the spread of CWD wasn’t detected on feedgrounds. Zero infected carcasses turned up one winter after state officials found at least nine dead elk that tested positive for the always-lethal prion disease at four different feedgrounds.
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department manages 21 elk feedgrounds across western Wyoming. As of 2026, those denoted by a red dot have previously had positive detections for chronic wasting disease. (Wyoming Game and Fish Department)
A slim-to-nonexistent snowpack in the low and middle elevations enabled the feedground-reliant elk herds in Jackson Hole and Star Valley to stay “really spread out,” Wise said.
“We monitored them extensively,” he said. “They were in places we were good with having them at. Because of that, we were able to not feed the great majority of the elk in the Jackson Region.”
Only two state-run feedgrounds operated: Forest Park, up the Greys River, and Camp Creek, which is located south of Jackson in the Gros Ventre Range foothills.
The National Elk Refuge, operated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, also didn’t feed elk for only the 11th time in its 114-year history.
A remarkably low percentage of elk died on the state-run feedgrounds in Game and Fish’s Jackson Region. There were only two: one cow and one calf. Between those and another half dozen or so elk that were hit on the highway, none tested positive for CWD, Wise said.
The elk feeding and disease picture was more or less the same in Game and Fish’s Pinedale Region. Feeding occurred at the Green River Lakes, Black Butte, Franz, Dell Creek, McNeel and Finnegan feedgrounds, but never started at three other sites and only lasted a short duration at two more feedgrounds.
All told, 18 dead elk were discovered on Pinedale Region feedgrounds over the winter. Fifteen tested negative for CWD while three carcasses were too scavenged for tests, according to Game and Fish spokeswoman Raegin Akhtar.
The scavenged dead bull and cow elk pictured were discovered over the weekend of Feb. 22-23, 2025 on the Dell Creek Feedground. The bull tested positive for chronic wasting disease, while the cow is suspected to have succumbed to CWD. (Wyoming Game and Fish Department)
Ahead of the winter, some anticipated that CWD-infected dead elk would begin piling up on the Bondurant-area Dell Creek Feedground, which is the farthest along in the disease’s epidemic curve. Six diseased elk were found dead there in the 2024-25 winter, and two GPS-collared adult cows died in the backcountry on summer range last summer, which stoked some concern.
“I honestly thought we would have found more CWD-positive elk around Dell Creek, but we didn’t,” Wise said.
During mid-winter counts, biologists and wardens tallied 380 elk at the 35-acre Dell Creek feeding site, located in the Hoback Basin. That’s a 23% drop from the 480 counted in winter 2024-25, which itself was down from the average of 571 elk counted during the three winters that preceded Wyoming’s 2024 elk feedground plan.
It’s “hard to attribute” the reduced number to any one cause, like CWD, but Wise surmised that the light winter played a role and some elk simply ventured elsewhere.
Elk congregate on the Dell Creek Feedground in February 2026. (Shane Moore)
There are methods available to test live elk for CWD at a place like Dell Creek. A newer test, known as “RT-QuIC,” allows biologists to quickly check for infectious CWD prions at low concentrations, even from live animal tissue — it’s being used currently to help monitor live animals in the catastrophically infected Project Mule Deer Herd.
One avid Wyoming elk hunter who’s taken a keen interest in CWD’s encroachment on feedgrounds has encouraged wildlife managers to employ the RT-QuIC technique at Dell Creek.
“Take the opportunity to learn as much as possible,” Jackson resident and filmmaker Shane Moore said. “We’re sort of flying blind right now.”
State wildlife officials are looking into it.
“We would like to really start focusing on Dell Creek to see what the disease dynamic is there,” Wise said. “We’re trying to see if we can get that validated for elk. It’d be nice to have a live animal test.”
Moore’s concerns are rooted in the expected outcome of feeding elk that are spreading CWD prions to each other and into the feedgrounds themselves. Infectious prions can bind with soil and grass, staying in the environment indefinitely, a trait that likely won’t bode well for animals drawn to the exact same spot year after year. Because of CWD, continued elk feeding is expected to cripple populations and hunting opportunities more in the long-term than weaning herds off of hay and alfalfa. Nevertheless, in part because of state law, Wyoming has charted a course to keep feeding elk despite the disease, albeit under the guidance of ‘action plans’ devised to slow its spread.
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