UPDATE: Yosemite National Park officials have indefinitely closed 91 cabins at the center of a probe into the deaths of two people from a mouse-borne virus.
Officials say the double-walled design of the cabins made it easy for mice to nest between the walls.
Over the past three weeks, two people have died of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome after staying in one of the so-called "Signature" cabins. Another person is confirmed ill and one more likely has the virus that kills 36 percent of the people it infects.
All of the victims stayed in the only tent-style cabins in Curry Village that are insulated.
Mike Gauthier, Yosemite chief of staff, said the design allowed for rodent infestation.
The disease is carried in the feces, urine and saliva of deer mice and other rodents.
ORIGINAL STORY: Report: Yosemite was warned about rodents and deadly hantavirus
The National Park Service was warned in 2010 that efforts should be stepped up to inspect for rodents in Yosemite and prevent them from entering areas where people sleep, according to a report obtained Thursday.
The disclosure came just days after a Pennsylvania visitor became the second park guest confirmed to have died of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. Public health officials were able to confirm both victims had stayed at the park's Curry Village in Yosemite Valley.
Earlier story: Cluster of deadly hantavirus cases worries officials
The 2010 report issued by the California Department of Public Health was commissioned by the park service.
"Inspections for rodent infestations and appropriate exclusion efforts, particularly for buildings were people sleep, should be enhanced," it said.
"We worked with Yosemite to evaluate risk and make recommendations to reduce the possibility of transmission to people," said Vicki Kramer, chief of the vector borne disease section of the health department. "That included reducing the number of mice, and excluding them from structures."
Further details were not immediately available. The health department said it was preparing a statement.
The report was commissioned after two park visitors became ill after staying in Tuolumne Meadows, about 4,000 feet higher than Yosemite Valley. It said that 18 percent of mice trapped for testing at various locations around the park were positive for hantavirus.
"The identification of the second case ... underscores the ongoing risk and need for dutiful adherence to a rodent exclusion and control program," the report said.
Officials with Yosemite National Park and public health officials with the National Park Service did not immediately return calls seeking comment.
Meanwhile, public health workers sent warnings to more people who visited Yosemite this summer, saying they could have been exposed to the deadly rodent-borne disease. They also handed out warnings to people entering park gates.
Officials sent emails and letters on Wednesday to another 1,000 people who stayed in tent cabins in Curry Village. That was in addition to 1,700 Curry Village guests who had previously been sent such warnings.
The disease can be transmitted by inhaling airborne particles of the feces, urine and saliva of deer mice and other rodents. At least one other person was sickened, and public health officials are awaiting tests on a fourth possible case.
The rustic tent cabins of historic Curry Village are a favorite among families looking to rough it in one of the nation's most majestic settings. All of the guests sent warnings stayed in the park's only tent cabins that are insulated against the elements.
Park employees removing insulation have found mouse nests and droppings in some of the 91 so-called Signature cabins they are attempting to seal up to make entry more difficult. The deer mice most prone to carrying hantavirus pulmonary syndrome can squeeze through holes just one-quarter-inch in diameter.
The guests being warned stayed in Curry Village's tent cabins in June, July or August. All four victims so far stayed in the cabins in June.
The illness begins as flu-like symptoms but can quickly affect the lungs. It can take up to six weeks to incubate.
In issuing the new warnings it was unclear whether authorities expanded the boundary of potential exposure or extended the dates.
In 2011, half of the 24 reported U.S. hantavirus victims died. But since 1993, when the virus first was identified, the average death rate has been 36 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Most of the nearly 600 cases reported since 1993 have been in New Mexico, Colorado, Washington, Arizona and California. Most often they are isolated, so having this cluster of cases from a small area in Yosemite has perplexed public health officials.
The federal government has two epidemiologists working in the park. They are trapping mice and rodents in an effort to determine how much of the population carries the virus and to see whether there are more mice in Yosemite Valley this year than in other years.
Deer mice are distinguished from solid-colored house mice by their white bellies and gray and brown bodies.
Kramer warned people never to sweep or vacuum mouse droppings. Instead spray them with a mixture of bleach and water, then use paper towels or a mop.
This past spring the California health department gave Yosemite a cleanup plan, Kramer said. "Yosemite, to their credit, has taken quite a few steps to address this," she said. "But it's a wilderness area and these buildings aren't going to be tight. It's impossible to get rid of the deer mice, so there is going to be some risk to being in a wilderness area."
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Related stories:
Second Yosemite visitor dies of rodent-borne illness
West Nile virus outbreak affects 1,100
New pig flu spreads to people at state fairs


A scientific report warned them.
Exactly. The National Park Service was warned.
The victims and family of the victims need to be compensated for this negligence.
I would suspect that parks all across the nation received generic warnings about this issue, especially since it is a relatively new phenomenon. Typical poorly written article.
As for negligence, you don't even know what the park might have already done in response to the original warning. This is a wilderness area, there is no way to guarantee that people will not be affected by this when camping in such an area. So many ignorant city people come to a place like Yosemite, and despite all the information given to them upon arrival they still refuse to follow much of it, as they see it as too much work on their part, and just refuse to imagine that it is really necessary. Just look at all the cars that get torn apart every year in that park because people are too stupid to follow the directions they are given about not leaving food, etc. in the vehicles. If you want guaranteed safety, of sorts, go use a hotel.
Dorothy, you don't lnow what you're talking about! Camp Curry at Yosemite is not a "wilderness" area!
The virus kills 36% of those affected? This is something new I have learned today, would not have guessed it would be that high of a figure. I would imagine this news will likely turn a lot of people off of camping now.
Funding has been cut to the bone. How in the world were they to do something about that warning?
mice live outside, if you go camping you might encounter mice- no one is due anything. every single person will die thats a fact, does not mean you need a payout for it
LR Lucas: I know exactly what Camp Curry is and where it is located. It is completely open to the wilderness that is Yosemite you tool, with nightly visitations by pretty much all of the nocturnal predators that call Yosemite home, including the bears. The simple ability to drive up and park within a short distance of it makes it no less a danger than many more isolated areas within the park. It is not a spotless sanitary haven like Disneyland. Idiots think simply because there are so many people in the Yosemite Valley on any given day that it somehow must be as safe and carefree as a downtown city park. Get a clue.
Dorothy of OZ--this "new phenom" was ID'ed in 1993. Prior to that, people still died from it. It's traditionally found in the desert SW, 4 Corners area.
Interesting to note though. Snakes eat the rodents. Housing developements now sit on historic snake breeding areas. Snake roundups are still held.
Kill off the snakes that Mother Nature put there for a reason and Nature gets un-balanced. Like the bearing killing story, there are some places people shouldn't live or recreate in.
Look for more of hantavirus and plague outbreaks in California, and other western states where it's not news when a person dies from it.
Really not wanting to play the race card but how many times have you heard about a Navajo dying from hanta virus? uh that would be never in the national news forums but a group of campers able to spend a lot of money for a vacation of a lifetime in Yosemite. Interesting.
The people who do monitor this stuff, have found deer mice infected with fleas that carry the plague. That didn't make a big stir in the news either but once people people living in areas that homes should not be built in, they will and Big Surprise, it'll be Big News.
The park should use recue cats that are vaccinated and neutered and spayed to catch the deer mice.
By being neutered and spayed, the cats will not alter the ecosystem of Curry Village, nor the rest of Yosemite.
They will see that the cats will do their job efficiently.
But, then again, what infections would the cats receive with the encounter with the infected deer mice?
If none, then it would be a win,win situation for Yosemite.
Hopefully, they will find a feasible solution.
I hate to state this point but this sounds similar to the plague.. same vector same result with a 33% death rate.
Uh... except plague was carried by the fleas, not the rats themselves, and bubonic plague, when treated, has mortality rate of up to 15%, untreated, up to 90%. Also, bubonic plague is a bacterium-based infection, which is treatable by antibiotics.
There is no treatment for the hantavirus.
The question asked , is the plague a virus or caused by bacteria? it is still unanswered. Also, there are three types of plague, one, pneumatic from mice has been found in this area previously. Based on the reports from the Park Service one has to wonder...
no, the there was no question asked! you made a supposition which was refuted! plague is a bacteria. there is only one 'type', with three manifestations of symptoms. it is treatable by antibiotics. the hantavirus is a virus. it is not treatable with antibiotics. further, the mice have been caught with hantavirus in their bodies, and that virus has been isolated in the lab and confirmed. what is it about this that you do not understand?
@Allie22: <3
I'm still chuckling over the pneumatic plague. I'm sure prof1940 meant pneumonic, but I'm just picturing these mice traveling around Yosemite in a series of pneumatic tubes.....
"The National Park Service was warned in 2010 that efforts should be stepped up to inspect for rodents in Yosemite and prevent them from entering areas where people sleep, according to a report obtained Thursday."
Our government has a history of ignoring warnings. Had they acted two years ago, these lives may not have been lost. However, preventive measures is not the American way. What we do is respond after the tragedy has occurred. I am a true believer that the same will happen with our infrastructure. When bridges collapse, tunnels flood, roads cave in, and buildings fall, the government will respond. Sadly the families of those who will die will not be able to file a law suit against the incompetent people who allow it to happen. I just can't understand why the American people refuse to remove the members of the house and senate, when they have had an 8% approval rating for over two years. These are the people we elected, and will reelect, to represent us and our country. They, in return, have told us to piss off. I suppose we are too busy fighting each other over petty, irrelevant issues to realize who the real enemies of the country are. Hint, they are in Washington making us pay and insure them while they serve cooperate America. By all means, continue to ignore me, and stay on the path that you are currently following. Good luck.
You must mean the Congress who has cut funding for the National parks.
The rest of Yosemite is supposed to be a wilderness, so why not remove all lodgings from inside the park, like they did at Rocky Mountain National Park many, many years ago and let visitors either camp on the ground or stay outside the park? Why not make the wilderness a real wilderness?
I can foresee the National Park System getting their butts sued off for these two deaths.
Of course, you must sue the pants off of the park service.... lol! Must be attorneys posting today. double lol!
Dorothy of Oz, apparently you haven't been to Curry Village recently or have never been in the first place. Whether or not you are a "city slicker" or "country bumpkin" makes no difference when the canvas tent cabins in Curry Village have doors that do not close tightly against the door frame...leaving a 2-3 inch gap wide open to the outside. I should know, I stayed there 2 weeks ago and had 3 rodents in my tent cabin within 20 minutes..running on the floor and the wooden beams INSIDE the cabin.
Feeling fine?
So I have a coveted reservation at Toulumne Meadows tent cabin. Should I go or not..... thoughts?
Have ANY OF YOU.....read the logo......for our so called wonderful CDC?????
Who care's if a few die from this so called virus? We've got Lyme, Bartonella, and many other virus and disease's right in that park...and everywhere in the USA!
Don't go away! Did you read up about the Woodchuck tick? It's in the CDC notes somewhere...no cure..just death...no big deal.....
I'm sorry for being so starcastic.....but...did I miss 60mins? Where are the programs out there to get rid of these ticks?...These Vector-borne things?...ohh you ready? There's away to do it by using the mouse and not even hurt it!
WOW that would get rid of major epidemic that is here right now! been growing and growing without anyting being done for over 30yrs...
I AM sorry for these 10K people....but come on....what the heck is that when you got TENS OF THOUSANDS being killed by Lyme...Bartonella.....Babsisa....
I'd like to know when CDC is going to get on board with the DEC(P)??? Ohh...and did I tell ya, these tick killing programs....are very cheap...every town could afford it!
Again......go to the CDC site......read the logo.......what was that? "helping people"..??? I forget...cuz I can't remember when I'm lied to ...too well......