Roe Doe Liver Issue

kieran222

Well-Known Member
Shot roe doe with a very strange liver. The doe was not much more than skin and bone, probably several years old weighed 28lbs. Glands didn't indicate any issues, the inner skin around the kidneys was brown/orange. The liver was discoloured, light and dark patches but didn't look like liver fluke from when I have seen it before.
The liver and attached growth were about the size of a half a football.
Anyone seen anything like this before?
 

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I'd go with tumout too. Bin the carcass just because it's probably in no fir state to eat rathert han any risk of eating tumour
Would the yellow staining in the membrane around the fillets be as a result of liver failure/jaundice?
 
Shot roe doe with a very strange liver. The doe was not much more than skin and bone, probably several years old weighed 28lbs. Glands didn't indicate any issues, the inner skin around the kidneys was brown/orange. The liver was discoloured, light and dark patches but didn't look like liver fluke from when I have seen it before.
The liver and attached growth were about the size of a half a football.
Anyone seen anything like this before?
 
Probably a primary liver tumour. Research in the 1990's found that
"Between January 1992 and March 1994 the geographical distribution and prevalence of hepatocellular tumours in roe deer in Britain was studied.
The highest prevalence was found in north east England and in the east of Scotland.
An as yet unidentified dietary factor is thought to have been involved in the development of these tumours."

These tumour cases were/are predominantly found in roe inhabiting large scale commercial Sitka/Norway spruce plantations such as the Scotland/England border country.
(From memory,) the research suggested one might expect to find one of these liver tumours in every 600 roe deer shot in these forests.
 
I had something similar the other day. Carcass weight was representative and no other indicators bar this big hard tumour and two smaller ones on the liver. Carcass did not enter the food chain. 51B7C2EA-F238-4C18-A947-2358C7ECE158.webp
80659C33-0916-4DEC-9F6F-134C964D9205.webp
 
This is 'probably' the same type of tumour - although the main association is with conifer plantations they can occur anywhere
 
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