Bield:Hunt
County disease record

Texas County, OK.

CWD PositiveEstimated — verify with agencyFIPS 40139

Texas County is among the seeded CWD-positive counties in Oklahoma. Below is what we have on record from publicly-reported agency sources, plus EHD activity history when available.

Verify with agency

County-level detection records, management zone boundaries, and transport rules can change between hunting seasons. Always cross-reference with Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation before relying on this page for hunting decisions.

CWD record for Texas County

Status
CWD Confirmed
First detection
1998
Most recent year on record
2024
Affected wildlife
Elk
Transport restrictions
No / Confirm
Mandatory testing
Voluntary / Confirm
200020052010201520202025First detection 1998Most recent 2024
Notes

Texas County appears in publicly-reported Oklahoma CWD detection records dating to approximately 1998. Verify current detection counts and management zone status with the state agency before relying on this record.

Hunter FAQ — Texas County

Is it safe to eat deer harvested in Texas County?
Texas County has confirmed CWD. CDC and state wildlife agencies recommend testing harvested deer for CWD before consumption in CWD-positive areas, and not consuming meat from deer that test positive. There is no documented case of CWD transmitting to humans, but the recommendation is precautionary. EHD is a separate concern — meat from EHD-affected deer is safe to consume; EHD does not affect humans.
Are there transport restrictions for harvest taken in Texas County?
If hunting in a CWD-positive area, follow your state agency's carcass transport rules — most agencies prohibit moving whole carcasses with brain or spinal tissue across designated zone boundaries. Verify the current rules with your state wildlife agency before transporting any harvest.
How do I get a deer tested for CWD here?
Most state wildlife agencies offer free or low-cost CWD testing of harvested deer at check stations or sample-drop locations during season. Contact the state agency for current testing locations and turnaround times.
Where does this county data come from?
This page summarizes publicly-reported information from Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, the USDA APHIS CWD distribution map, and the National Deer Association EHD tracker. Records flagged "estimated" mean we have not personally verified the specific record against a primary agency report — cross-reference before relying on the data for hunting decisions.

Track herd health on your land.

Statewide and county data tells you what to expect in general. Bield: Hunt logs every sick or recovered deer you spot on your specific property — and surfaces patterns across seasons that outlive any single year's outbreak.