Pets and Livestock
Disease Transmission
Alaska’s stringent laws on pets, livestock, and their importation were created in part to prevent the spread of disease and parasites between domesticated and wild organisms. Illegally keeping a wild species as a pet and then releasing it can cause the spread of a domestic species disease out into a wild population of fish or wildlife. The same thing can happen when infected livestock or pack animals are allowed to come into contact with their wild counterparts, or the habitats used by those animals.
More Information
- Common wildlife diseases and parasites (PDF 146 kB)
- What is this "thing" in my game? (PDF 231 kB)
- Can my dog get sick from raw game meat? (PDF 316 kB)