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Feral pig

A feral pig is a domestic pig which has gone feral, meaning it lives in the wild. The term feral pig has also been applied to wild boars, which can interbreed with domestic pigs.[1] They are found mostly in the Americas and Australia. Razorback and wild hog are Americanisms applied to feral pigs or boar–pig hybrids.

Two wild pigs near Kennedy Space Center, Florida

Definition

A feral pig is a domestic pig that has escaped or been released into the wild, and is living more or less as a wild animal, or one that is descended from such animals.[2] Zoologists generally exclude from the feral category animals that, although captive, were genuinely wild before they escaped.[3] Accordingly, Eurasian wild boar, released or escaped into habitats where they are not native, such as in North America, are not generally considered feral, although they may interbreed with feral pigs.[4] Likewise, reintroduced wild boars in Western Europe are also not considered feral, despite the fact that they were raised in captivity prior to their release.

North America

 
A family of wild pigs, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Domestic pigs were first introduced to the Americas in the 16th century.[5] Christopher Columbus intentionally released domestic swine in the West Indies during his second voyage to provide future expeditions with a freely available food supply.[6] Hernando de Soto is known to have introduced Eurasian domestic swine to Florida in 1539,[7] though it is possible that Juan Ponce de León had already introduced the first pigs into mainland Florida in 1521.[8]

The practice of introducing domestic pigs into the New World persisted throughout the exploration periods of the 16th and 17th centuries.[5] The Eurasian wild boar (S. s. scrofa), which originally ranged from Great Britain to European Russia, may have also been introduced.[9] By the 19th century, their numbers were sufficient in some areas such as the Southern United States to become a common game animal.

Feral pigs are a growing problem in the United States and also on the southern prairies in Canada.[10] As of 2013, the estimated population of 6 million[11] feral pigs causes billions of dollars in property and agricultural damage every year in the United States,[citation needed] both in wild and agricultural lands. Their ecological damage may be equally problematic with 26% lower vertebrate species richness in forest fragments they have invaded.[12] Because pigs forage by rooting for their food under the ground with their snouts and tusks, a group of feral pigs can damage acres of planted fields in just a few nights.[11] Due to the feral pig's omnivorous nature, it is a danger to both plants and animals endemic to the area it is invading. Game animals such as deer and turkeys, and more specifically, flora such as the Opuntia plant have been especially affected by the feral hog's aggressive competition for resources.[13] Feral pigs have been determined to be potential hosts for at least 34 pathogens that can be transmitted to livestock, wildlife, and humans.[14] For commercial pig farmers, great concern exists that some of the hogs could be a vector for swine fever to return to the U.S., which has been extinct in America since 1978. Feral pigs could also present an immediate threat to "nonbiosecure" domestic pig facilities because of their likeliness to harbor and spread pathogens, particularly the protozoan Sarcocystis.[15]

By the early 2000s, the range of feral pigs included all of the U.S. south of 36° north. The range begins in the mountains surrounding California[16] and crosses over the mountains, continuing consistently much farther east towards the Louisiana bayous and forests, terminating in the entire Florida peninsula. In the East, the range expands northward to include most of the forested areas and swamps of the Southeast, and from there goes north along the Appalachian Mountains as far as upstate New York, with a growing presence in states bordering West Virginia and Kentucky. Texas has the largest estimated population of 2.5–2.6 million feral pigs existing in 253 of its 254 counties,[17] and they cause about $50 million in agriculture damage per year.

Hunting in the United States

 
A hunted wild pig
 
Feral pigs being shot from a helicopter, Texas Wildlife Services
 
A corral-type trap being baited. Food is left to accustom pigs to using the trap as a daily food source; eventually, the gate can be triggered remotely when most or all the members of a sounder are inside the trap[18]

To control feral pig numbers, American hunters have taken to trapping and killing as many individuals as they can. Some, in Texas, have even turned the trapping and killing of razorbacks into small businesses.[19][20][21] The meat of wild pigs may be suitable for human consumption; around 461,000 animals killed in Texas between 2004 and 2009 were federally inspected and commercially sold for consumption.[22]

Legal restrictions on methods of hunting are lax, as most state departments of wildlife openly acknowledge feral pigs as an ecological threat and some classify them as vermin. For example, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources considers them unprotected wild animals with no closed season or harvest limit, and promotes their aggressive removal.[23]

Shooting pigs from a helicopter is legal in Texas, and can be an effective method, killing as many as 9 to 27 animals per hour.[24] Helicopters can cost from US$400 to US$1000 per hour to operate. These costs are defrayed by selling seats on these helicopter flights to recreational hunters; Texas law only requires that those buying a helicopter hunt be in possession of a hunting license. The method relies on the helicopter flushing pigs into the open where they can be targeted. In some areas, such as the Piney Woods, this may not be possible because of vegetation.[25]

Hunting with dogs is permitted and very common; it has been practiced in the Southeast for generations. Competitions for producing the fastest bay dogs are prevalent in the South, with Uncle Earl's Hog Dog Trials in Louisiana a popular example, held every summer since 1995. Preferred scent dogs for catching feral pigs mostly are native breeds, and include the Catahoula Leopard Dog, the Blue Lacy, the Leopard Hound, all six of the Coonhound breeds, and the Blackmouth Cur.

Catch dogs typically are American Pit Bull Terriers and their crosses, the Catahoula (dual purpose), the Dogo Argentino, a dog used for the same purpose in South America, and American Bulldogs; the first of these has been put back to work as a utility breed[26][27] over the past 30 years and its tenacity on the hunt and undying loyalty to protect its master have made it a popular asset.[28][29] The method of hunting has little variation: usually, the hunter sends out bay dogs trained to chase the pig until it tires and then corner it; then a bigger catch dog is sent out to catch and hold down the pig, which may get aggressive, until the hunter arrives to kill it.[30][31][32]

No single management technique alone can be totally effective at controlling feral pig populations. Harvesting 66% of the total population per year is required to keep the Texas feral pig populations stable.[33] Best management practices suggest the use of corral traps which have the ability to capture the entire sounder of feral pigs. The federal government spends $20 million on feral pig management.[34]

In February 2017, Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller approved the use of a pesticide called Kaput Feral Hog Lure, which is bait food laced with warfarin (a rodenticide used to kill rodents).[35]

Hawaii

A genetic analysis found that the first pigs were introduced to Hawaii by Polynesians in approximately AD 1200.[36] Additional varieties of European pigs were introduced after Captain Cook's arrival into Hawaii in 1778,[37] where they prey on or eat endangered birds and plants. The population of feral pigs has increased from 2 million pigs ranging over 20 states in 1990, to triple that number 25 years later, ranging over 38 states with new territories expanding north into Oregon, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and New Hampshire. Some of these feral pigs have mixed with escaped Russian boars that have been introduced for hunters since the early 1990s.[38]

Feral pigs are opportunistic omnivores, with about 85%-90% of their diet being plant matter, and the remainder animal.[22] Plants have difficulties regenerating from their wallowing, as North American flora did not evolve to withstand the destruction caused by rooting pigs, unlike European or Asian flora.[39] Feral pigs in the U.S. eat small animals, mostly invertebrates like insects and worms but also vertebrates such as wild turkey poults, toads, tortoises, and the eggs of reptiles and birds.[40] This can deprive other wildlife that normally would feed upon these important food sources.

In some case, other wildlife are out-competed by the feral pigs' higher reproductive rate; a sow can become pregnant as early as six months old and give birth to multiple litters of piglets yearly.[22] In the autumn, other animals such as the American black bear compete directly with feral pigs as both forage for tree mast (the fruit of forest trees).[41] These are likely reasons that they reduce diversity when they invade.[12]

In the U.S., the problems caused by feral pigs are exacerbated by the small number of species which prey on them. Predators such as bobcats and coyotes may occasionally take feral piglets or weakened animals, but are not large enough to challenge a full-grown boar that can grow to three times their weight. In Florida, feral pigs made up a significant portion of the Florida panther's diet.[42] Other potential predators include the gray wolf, red wolf, cougar, jaguar, American alligator, American black bear, and grizzly bear. Unfortunately, each keystone predator presents problems: the jaguar is extirpated from California and the Southwest. The grizzly bear, while native to most of the American West, is gone from the states that have large feral pig populations, namely Texas, Arizona, California, and New Mexico; and the species also has a very slow reproductive rate. Wolf numbers are small and expected to remain so as they slowly repopulate their range; only a few individuals thus far have been recorded as inhabiting California, in spite of thousands of square miles of good habitat. The cougar is present in most of the West, but is gone from the East, with no known populations east of Minnesota in the north, and very thin numbers east of Houston in the South. The American black bear is both predator and competitor, but in most areas probably may not impact feral pig populations enough to control them. Programs do exist to protect the weakened numbers of large predators in the U.S., but it is expected to take a very long time for these animals to naturally repopulate their former habitat.[43]

South America

In South America, during the early 20th century, free-ranging boars were introduced in Uruguay for hunting purposes and eventually crossed the border into Brazil in the 1990s, quickly becoming an invasive species. Licensed private hunting of both feral boars and their hybrids with domestic pigs was authorized from August 2005 on in the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul,[44] although their presence as a pest had been already noticed by the press as early as 1994.[45] Releases and escapes from unlicensed farms (established because of increased demand for boar meat as an alternative to pork) continued to bolster feral populations and, by mid-2008, licensed hunts had to be expanded to the states of Santa Catarina and São Paulo.[46]

Recently established Brazilian boar populations are not to be confused with long-established populations of feral domestic pigs, which have existed mainly in the Pantanal for more than 100 years, along with native peccaries. The demographic dynamics of the interaction between feral pig populations and those of the two native species of peccaries (collared peccary and white-lipped peccary) is obscure and is still being studied. The existence of feral pigs could somewhat ease jaguar predation on peccary populations, as jaguars show a preference for hunting pigs when they are available.[47]

Australia

 
A feral pig in a back yard in Brisbane, Australia, 2009
 
Distribution of feral pigs in Australia

The first recorded release of pigs in Australia was made by Captain James Cook at Adventure Bay, Bruny Island in 1777. This was part of his policy of introducing animals and plants to newly discovered countries. He "carried them (a boar and sow) about a mile within the woods at the head of the bay and there left them by the side of a fresh water brook". The deliberate introduction of pigs into previously pig-free areas seems to have been common. As recently as the early 1970s, pigs were introduced to Babel Island, off the east coast of Flinders Island. These pigs were eradicated by Department of Agriculture staff with local assistance.[48]

One common story about the feral pig population on Flinders Island is that pigs were released when the ship City of Foo Chow went ashore on the northeast coast of the island in March 1877. On Flinders Island, feral pigs usually invade agricultural areas adjacent to the national park and east-coast swamps. Farmers consider damage caused by the pigs to be minor, as it is restricted to rooting in pasture adjacent to scrubland edges. The total pasture area damaged each year is estimated to be less than 50 hectares. Feral pigs are reported to visit paddocks where ewes are lambing, but no lambs are reported as having been killed. As omnivores, they may scavenge any carcasses left near the scrubland, thus developing a potential "taste" for lamb or mutton. In the Strzelecki National Park on the island, the ecosystem has been severely damaged; extensive rooting in the gullies led to water erosion and loss of regenerating forest plants. Bracken fern (Pteridium esculentum) flourishes in this damaged environment and dominates large areas forming dense stands to about 4 m which prevent light reaching the forest floor.[48]

Since 1987, feral pigs have been considered to be the most important mammalian pest of Australian agriculture.[48] Feral pigs may be a new food source for crocodiles, helping to boost their population.[49][50]

While no incidences of feral pigs killing newborn lambs have been recorded in Australia, the same cannot be said in nearby New Zealand, where feral pigs have been seen with some regularity in and around the island nation's capital of Wellington.[51] Here, they have been documented killing and consuming newborn/juvenile dairy goats kept on farms, separating the youngest goats from the rest of the herd; the feral pigs (which usually raid the farms by cover of darkness) will also threaten any guard dogs present into submission, in order to attack and eat the goat kids. As of September 2022, one single goat farm in the suburb of Brooklyn has estimated their total loss to feral hogs to be at least 60 kids.[51] According to property co-owner Naomi Steenkamp, "It's a murder scene", with the morning revealing evidence of the previous night's carnage—bone fragments, such as bits of hoof and skull, are often all that remain of the helpless young goats. Additionally, Steenkamp has stated that "...If they [feral pigs] find something they like eating, and it is a free feed – like a newborn kid – they are going to keep coming back."[51] The pigs also damage the nesting sites of New Zealand's endemic wildlife, including kiwi and other ground-nesting and flightless birds, and may target chicks and eggs for food, as well as adult birds.

Fatal attacks on human beings

Feral pigs can be dangerous to people, particularly when the pigs travel in herds with their young, and should be avoided when possible. Feral pigs living in the United States have been known to attack without provocation and fatally injure human beings. There have been over 100 documented attacks by feral pigs on human beings in the United States between the years 1825 and 2012. Of these attacks, five have been fatal. Three of the five fatal attacks were by feral pigs wounded by hunters. Both male and female feral pigs are known to attack without provocation, and attacks by solitary males, as well as group attacks have been documented.[52][53][54]

On November 26, 2019, a 59-year-old Texas woman named Christine Rollins was attacked and killed only a few feet away from the front door of her workplace by a herd of feral pigs in the town of Anahuac, Texas, which is 50 miles east of Houston. This incident was the fifth documented fatal feral pig attack in the United States since 1825.[52] Chambers County Sheriff Brian Hawthorne in a formal statement to news media stated that "multiple hogs" assaulted Rollins during pre-dawn hours between 6 and 6:30 a.m. when it was still dark outside. The victim died of blood loss as a result of her injuries.[55]

See also

References

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  2. ^ Cf. "feral". Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. Retrieved November 20, 2014.
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  35. ^ "Fearing "feral hog apocalypse," Texas approves drastic measures". CBS News. February 21, 2017. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
  36. ^ Linderholm, Anna; Spencer, Daisy; Battista, Vincent; Frantz, Laurent; Barnett, Ross; Fleischer, Robert C.; James, Helen F.; Duffy, Dave; Sparks, Jed P.; Clements, David R.; Andersson, Leif; Dobney, Keith; Leonard, Jennifer A.; Larson, Greger (2016). "A novel MC1R allele for black coat colour reveals the Polynesian ancestry and hybridization patterns of Hawaiian feral pigs". Royal Society Open Science. 3 (9): 160304. Bibcode:2016RSOS....360304L. doi:10.1098/rsos.160304. ISSN 2054-5703. PMC 5043315. PMID 27703696.
  37. ^ Downes, Lawrence (May 19, 2013). "In pursuit of Hawaii's wild feral pigs". The Seattle Times. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  38. ^ Goode, Erica (April 27, 2013). "When One Man's Game Is Also a Marauding Pest". The New York Times. Retrieved September 6, 2017.
  39. ^ Giuliano, William M. (February 5, 2013). . Electronic Data Information Source. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Archived from the original on March 9, 2016. Retrieved February 2, 2016.
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  48. ^ a b c Statham, M.; Middleton, M. (1987). "Feral pigs on Flinders Island". Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania. 121: 121–124. doi:10.26749/rstpp.121.121.
  49. ^ Osbourne, Margaret (May 17, 2022). "Feral Pigs May Have Helped Boost Crocodile Numbers in the Northern Territory, Australia". Smithsonian. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
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  51. ^ a b c Corlett, Eva @evacorlett (September 26, 2022). "'It's a murder scene': feral pigs torment residents in New Zealand capital; Farm just minutes from centre of Wellington estimates it has lost about 60 kid goats in past few months". The Guardian. Retrieved April 9, 2023.
  52. ^ a b "Feral Hogs Attack and Kill a Woman in Texas". The New York Times. November 26, 2019. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  53. ^ Mayer, John J. (April 3, 2014). "Wild Pig Attacks on Humans". Proceedings of the 15th Wildlife Damage Management Conference. Wildlife Damage Management Conference. Retrieved December 6, 2019.
  54. ^ "Wild pig attacks on humans, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Peer Reviewed Study".
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External links

  • Coping With Feral Hogs
  • Feral Hogs and Agriculture November 9, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  • U.S. distribution maps by county

feral, razorback, redirects, here, whale, species, whale, other, uses, razorback, disambiguation, feral, domestic, which, gone, feral, meaning, lives, wild, term, feral, also, been, applied, wild, boars, which, interbreed, with, domestic, pigs, they, found, mo. Razorback redirects here For the whale species see Fin whale For other uses see Razorback disambiguation A feral pig is a domestic pig which has gone feral meaning it lives in the wild The term feral pig has also been applied to wild boars which can interbreed with domestic pigs 1 They are found mostly in the Americas and Australia Razorback and wild hog are Americanisms applied to feral pigs or boar pig hybrids Two wild pigs near Kennedy Space Center Florida Contents 1 Definition 2 North America 2 1 Hunting in the United States 3 Hawaii 4 South America 5 Australia 6 Fatal attacks on human beings 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksDefinitionA feral pig is a domestic pig that has escaped or been released into the wild and is living more or less as a wild animal or one that is descended from such animals 2 Zoologists generally exclude from the feral category animals that although captive were genuinely wild before they escaped 3 Accordingly Eurasian wild boar released or escaped into habitats where they are not native such as in North America are not generally considered feral although they may interbreed with feral pigs 4 Likewise reintroduced wild boars in Western Europe are also not considered feral despite the fact that they were raised in captivity prior to their release North America nbsp A family of wild pigs U S Fish and Wildlife ServiceDomestic pigs were first introduced to the Americas in the 16th century 5 Christopher Columbus intentionally released domestic swine in the West Indies during his second voyage to provide future expeditions with a freely available food supply 6 Hernando de Soto is known to have introduced Eurasian domestic swine to Florida in 1539 7 though it is possible that Juan Ponce de Leon had already introduced the first pigs into mainland Florida in 1521 8 The practice of introducing domestic pigs into the New World persisted throughout the exploration periods of the 16th and 17th centuries 5 The Eurasian wild boar S s scrofa which originally ranged from Great Britain to European Russia may have also been introduced 9 By the 19th century their numbers were sufficient in some areas such as the Southern United States to become a common game animal Feral pigs are a growing problem in the United States and also on the southern prairies in Canada 10 As of 2013 update the estimated population of 6 million 11 feral pigs causes billions of dollars in property and agricultural damage every year in the United States citation needed both in wild and agricultural lands Their ecological damage may be equally problematic with 26 lower vertebrate species richness in forest fragments they have invaded 12 Because pigs forage by rooting for their food under the ground with their snouts and tusks a group of feral pigs can damage acres of planted fields in just a few nights 11 Due to the feral pig s omnivorous nature it is a danger to both plants and animals endemic to the area it is invading Game animals such as deer and turkeys and more specifically flora such as the Opuntia plant have been especially affected by the feral hog s aggressive competition for resources 13 Feral pigs have been determined to be potential hosts for at least 34 pathogens that can be transmitted to livestock wildlife and humans 14 For commercial pig farmers great concern exists that some of the hogs could be a vector for swine fever to return to the U S which has been extinct in America since 1978 Feral pigs could also present an immediate threat to nonbiosecure domestic pig facilities because of their likeliness to harbor and spread pathogens particularly the protozoan Sarcocystis 15 By the early 2000s the range of feral pigs included all of the U S south of 36 north The range begins in the mountains surrounding California 16 and crosses over the mountains continuing consistently much farther east towards the Louisiana bayous and forests terminating in the entire Florida peninsula In the East the range expands northward to include most of the forested areas and swamps of the Southeast and from there goes north along the Appalachian Mountains as far as upstate New York with a growing presence in states bordering West Virginia and Kentucky Texas has the largest estimated population of 2 5 2 6 million feral pigs existing in 253 of its 254 counties 17 and they cause about 50 million in agriculture damage per year Hunting in the United States nbsp A hunted wild pig nbsp Feral pigs being shot from a helicopter Texas Wildlife Services nbsp A corral type trap being baited Food is left to accustom pigs to using the trap as a daily food source eventually the gate can be triggered remotely when most or all the members of a sounder are inside the trap 18 To control feral pig numbers American hunters have taken to trapping and killing as many individuals as they can Some in Texas have even turned the trapping and killing of razorbacks into small businesses 19 20 21 The meat of wild pigs may be suitable for human consumption around 461 000 animals killed in Texas between 2004 and 2009 were federally inspected and commercially sold for consumption 22 Legal restrictions on methods of hunting are lax as most state departments of wildlife openly acknowledge feral pigs as an ecological threat and some classify them as vermin For example the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources considers them unprotected wild animals with no closed season or harvest limit and promotes their aggressive removal 23 Shooting pigs from a helicopter is legal in Texas and can be an effective method killing as many as 9 to 27 animals per hour 24 Helicopters can cost from US 400 to US 1000 per hour to operate These costs are defrayed by selling seats on these helicopter flights to recreational hunters Texas law only requires that those buying a helicopter hunt be in possession of a hunting license The method relies on the helicopter flushing pigs into the open where they can be targeted In some areas such as the Piney Woods this may not be possible because of vegetation 25 Hunting with dogs is permitted and very common it has been practiced in the Southeast for generations Competitions for producing the fastest bay dogs are prevalent in the South with Uncle Earl s Hog Dog Trials in Louisiana a popular example held every summer since 1995 Preferred scent dogs for catching feral pigs mostly are native breeds and include the Catahoula Leopard Dog the Blue Lacy the Leopard Hound all six of the Coonhound breeds and the Blackmouth Cur Catch dogs typically are American Pit Bull Terriers and their crosses the Catahoula dual purpose the Dogo Argentino a dog used for the same purpose in South America and American Bulldogs the first of these has been put back to work as a utility breed 26 27 over the past 30 years and its tenacity on the hunt and undying loyalty to protect its master have made it a popular asset 28 29 The method of hunting has little variation usually the hunter sends out bay dogs trained to chase the pig until it tires and then corner it then a bigger catch dog is sent out to catch and hold down the pig which may get aggressive until the hunter arrives to kill it 30 31 32 No single management technique alone can be totally effective at controlling feral pig populations Harvesting 66 of the total population per year is required to keep the Texas feral pig populations stable 33 Best management practices suggest the use of corral traps which have the ability to capture the entire sounder of feral pigs The federal government spends 20 million on feral pig management 34 In February 2017 Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller approved the use of a pesticide called Kaput Feral Hog Lure which is bait food laced with warfarin a rodenticide used to kill rodents 35 HawaiiA genetic analysis found that the first pigs were introduced to Hawaii by Polynesians in approximately AD 1200 36 Additional varieties of European pigs were introduced after Captain Cook s arrival into Hawaii in 1778 37 where they prey on or eat endangered birds and plants The population of feral pigs has increased from 2 million pigs ranging over 20 states in 1990 to triple that number 25 years later ranging over 38 states with new territories expanding north into Oregon Pennsylvania Ohio and New Hampshire Some of these feral pigs have mixed with escaped Russian boars that have been introduced for hunters since the early 1990s 38 Feral pigs are opportunistic omnivores with about 85 90 of their diet being plant matter and the remainder animal 22 Plants have difficulties regenerating from their wallowing as North American flora did not evolve to withstand the destruction caused by rooting pigs unlike European or Asian flora 39 Feral pigs in the U S eat small animals mostly invertebrates like insects and worms but also vertebrates such as wild turkey poults toads tortoises and the eggs of reptiles and birds 40 This can deprive other wildlife that normally would feed upon these important food sources In some case other wildlife are out competed by the feral pigs higher reproductive rate a sow can become pregnant as early as six months old and give birth to multiple litters of piglets yearly 22 In the autumn other animals such as the American black bear compete directly with feral pigs as both forage for tree mast the fruit of forest trees 41 These are likely reasons that they reduce diversity when they invade 12 In the U S the problems caused by feral pigs are exacerbated by the small number of species which prey on them Predators such as bobcats and coyotes may occasionally take feral piglets or weakened animals but are not large enough to challenge a full grown boar that can grow to three times their weight In Florida feral pigs made up a significant portion of the Florida panther s diet 42 Other potential predators include the gray wolf red wolf cougar jaguar American alligator American black bear and grizzly bear Unfortunately each keystone predator presents problems the jaguar is extirpated from California and the Southwest The grizzly bear while native to most of the American West is gone from the states that have large feral pig populations namely Texas Arizona California and New Mexico and the species also has a very slow reproductive rate Wolf numbers are small and expected to remain so as they slowly repopulate their range only a few individuals thus far have been recorded as inhabiting California in spite of thousands of square miles of good habitat The cougar is present in most of the West but is gone from the East with no known populations east of Minnesota in the north and very thin numbers east of Houston in the South The American black bear is both predator and competitor but in most areas probably may not impact feral pig populations enough to control them Programs do exist to protect the weakened numbers of large predators in the U S but it is expected to take a very long time for these animals to naturally repopulate their former habitat 43 South AmericaIn South America during the early 20th century free ranging boars were introduced in Uruguay for hunting purposes and eventually crossed the border into Brazil in the 1990s quickly becoming an invasive species Licensed private hunting of both feral boars and their hybrids with domestic pigs was authorized from August 2005 on in the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul 44 although their presence as a pest had been already noticed by the press as early as 1994 45 Releases and escapes from unlicensed farms established because of increased demand for boar meat as an alternative to pork continued to bolster feral populations and by mid 2008 licensed hunts had to be expanded to the states of Santa Catarina and Sao Paulo 46 Recently established Brazilian boar populations are not to be confused with long established populations of feral domestic pigs which have existed mainly in the Pantanal for more than 100 years along with native peccaries The demographic dynamics of the interaction between feral pig populations and those of the two native species of peccaries collared peccary and white lipped peccary is obscure and is still being studied The existence of feral pigs could somewhat ease jaguar predation on peccary populations as jaguars show a preference for hunting pigs when they are available 47 Australia nbsp A feral pig in a back yard in Brisbane Australia 2009 nbsp Distribution of feral pigs in AustraliaThe first recorded release of pigs in Australia was made by Captain James Cook at Adventure Bay Bruny Island in 1777 This was part of his policy of introducing animals and plants to newly discovered countries He carried them a boar and sow about a mile within the woods at the head of the bay and there left them by the side of a fresh water brook The deliberate introduction of pigs into previously pig free areas seems to have been common As recently as the early 1970s pigs were introduced to Babel Island off the east coast of Flinders Island These pigs were eradicated by Department of Agriculture staff with local assistance 48 One common story about the feral pig population on Flinders Island is that pigs were released when the ship City of Foo Chow went ashore on the northeast coast of the island in March 1877 On Flinders Island feral pigs usually invade agricultural areas adjacent to the national park and east coast swamps Farmers consider damage caused by the pigs to be minor as it is restricted to rooting in pasture adjacent to scrubland edges The total pasture area damaged each year is estimated to be less than 50 hectares Feral pigs are reported to visit paddocks where ewes are lambing but no lambs are reported as having been killed As omnivores they may scavenge any carcasses left near the scrubland thus developing a potential taste for lamb or mutton In the Strzelecki National Park on the island the ecosystem has been severely damaged extensive rooting in the gullies led to water erosion and loss of regenerating forest plants Bracken fern Pteridium esculentum flourishes in this damaged environment and dominates large areas forming dense stands to about 4 m which prevent light reaching the forest floor 48 Since 1987 feral pigs have been considered to be the most important mammalian pest of Australian agriculture 48 Feral pigs may be a new food source for crocodiles helping to boost their population 49 50 While no incidences of feral pigs killing newborn lambs have been recorded in Australia the same cannot be said in nearby New Zealand where feral pigs have been seen with some regularity in and around the island nation s capital of Wellington 51 Here they have been documented killing and consuming newborn juvenile dairy goats kept on farms separating the youngest goats from the rest of the herd the feral pigs which usually raid the farms by cover of darkness will also threaten any guard dogs present into submission in order to attack and eat the goat kids As of September 2022 one single goat farm in the suburb of Brooklyn has estimated their total loss to feral hogs to be at least 60 kids 51 According to property co owner Naomi Steenkamp It s a murder scene with the morning revealing evidence of the previous night s carnage bone fragments such as bits of hoof and skull are often all that remain of the helpless young goats Additionally Steenkamp has stated that If they feral pigs find something they like eating and it is a free feed like a newborn kid they are going to keep coming back 51 The pigs also damage the nesting sites of New Zealand s endemic wildlife including kiwi and other ground nesting and flightless birds and may target chicks and eggs for food as well as adult birds Fatal attacks on human beingsFeral pigs can be dangerous to people particularly when the pigs travel in herds with their young and should be avoided when possible Feral pigs living in the United States have been known to attack without provocation and fatally injure human beings There have been over 100 documented attacks by feral pigs on human beings in the United States between the years 1825 and 2012 Of these attacks five have been fatal Three of the five fatal attacks were by feral pigs wounded by hunters Both male and female feral pigs are known to attack without provocation and attacks by solitary males as well as group attacks have been documented 52 53 54 On November 26 2019 a 59 year old Texas woman named Christine Rollins was attacked and killed only a few feet away from the front door of her workplace by a herd of feral pigs in the town of Anahuac Texas which is 50 miles east of Houston This incident was the fifth documented fatal feral pig attack in the United States since 1825 52 Chambers County Sheriff Brian Hawthorne in a formal statement to news media stated that multiple hogs assaulted Rollins during pre dawn hours between 6 and 6 30 a m when it was still dark outside The victim died of blood loss as a result of her injuries 55 See alsoBoar hunting Boar pig hybrid Hog dog rodeo Pig wrestlingReferences An Overview of Wild Pigs Wild Pigs wildpigs nri tamu edu Retrieved July 5 2023 Cf feral Merriam Webster Online Dictionary Retrieved November 20 2014 Lever C 1996 Naturalized birds Feral exotic introduced or alien British Birds 89 8 367 368 John J Mayer I Lehr Brisbin Jr March 1 2008 Wild Pigs in the United States Their History Comparative Morphology and Current Status University of Georgia Press pp 1 3 ISBN 978 0 8203 3137 9 Retrieved November 20 2014 a b tworiversoutdoorclub com tworiversoutdoorclub com Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Retrieved February 10 2014 History and Distribution of Feral Hogs in Texas AgriLife org Archived from the original on April 13 2016 Retrieved February 2 2016 Woodward Susan L Quinn Joyce A September 30 2011 Encyclopedia of Invasive Species From Africanized Honey Bees to Zebra Mussels ABC CLIO pp 277 ISBN 978 0 313 38220 8 Mayer John J Brisbin I Lehr Jr March 1 2008 Wild Pigs in the United States Their History Comparative Morphology and Current Status University of Georgia Press pp 20 ff ISBN 978 0 8203 3137 9 Retrieved December 26 2011 Scheggi Massimo 1999 La Bestia Nera Caccia al Cinghiale fra Mito Storia e Attualita in Italian Editoriale Olimpia p 201 ISBN 88 253 7904 8 Kaufmann Bill March 23 2013 Alberta bringing in bounty to deal with brewing wild boar woes Calgary Sun Archived from the original on September 12 2014 a b Feral pigs Pork chopped The Economist May 4 2013 Retrieved February 10 2014 a b Ivey Matthew R Colvin Michael Strickland Bronson K Lashley Marcus A June 14 2019 Reduced vertebrate diversity independent of spatial scale following feral swine invasions Ecology and Evolution 9 13 7761 7767 doi 10 1002 ece3 5360 ISSN 2045 7758 PMC 6635915 PMID 31346438 Taylor Richard B Hellgren Eric C 1997 Diet of Feral Hogs in the Western South Texas Plains The Southwestern Naturalist 42 1 33 39 JSTOR 30054058 Miller R S Sweeney S J Slootmaker C Grear D A Di Salvo P A Kiser D Shwiff S A 2017 Cross species transmission potential between wild pigs livestock poultry wildlife and humans Implications for disease risk management in North America Scientific Reports 7 1 7821 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 7821M doi 10 1038 s41598 017 07336 z PMC 5552697 PMID 28798293 Calero Bernal R Verma S K Oliveira S Yang Y Rosenthal B M Dubey J P April 1 2015 In the United States negligible rates of zoonotic sarcocystosis occur in feral swine that by contrast frequently harbour infections with Sarcocystis miescheriana a related parasite contracted from canids Parasitology 142 4 549 56 doi 10 1017 S0031182014001553 PMID 25363485 S2CID 44325702 Dowd Katie December 26 2019 One eccentric socialite is to blame for California s wild pig problem www sfgate com Retrieved December 28 2019 Coping with Feral Hogs Texas A amp M University March 25 2014 Retrieved March 25 2014 JAGER PRO March 24 2015 Hog Trapping with Integrated Wild Pig Control Video Archived from the original on November 18 2021 Horansky Andrew April 26 2013 High tech hunting for Texas feral hogs Houston KHOU Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 10 2014 Hawkes Logan May 17 2013 Feral hog control the military way Southeast Farm Press Retrieved February 10 2014 Ramchandani Ariel March 15 2017 The Business of Shooting Pigs from the Sky Pacific Standard Retrieved March 17 2017 a b c Frequently Asked Questions Wild Pigs Coping with Feral Hogs FeralHogs TAMU edu Texas A amp M University Archived from the original on January 12 2016 Retrieved February 10 2014 Feral Pig Control DNR Wi gov Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Retrieved November 23 2015 Campbell Tyler Long David Leland Bruce 2010 Feral Swine Behavior Relative to Aerial Gunning in Southern Texas Report USDA National Wildlife Research Center Staff Publications Vol 886 University of Nebraska Lincoln Gaskins Dan November 25 2013 The Porkchopper Aerial Hunting of Feral Hogs Wild Wonderings Texas A amp M Natural Resources Institute Retrieved November 27 2019 Pit Bull Is Not a Breed Pitbullinfo org American Pit Bull Terrier April 5 2017 Dogging Hogs Alabama Outdoor News January 28 2020 Using Pit Bulls for Hog Hunting Good Pit Bulls September 21 2012 Cur Dog History HuntingDogOS com Archived from the original on June 12 2009 Retrieved September 6 2017 Rodriguez Greg Boar Guide Archived from the original on February 27 2009 Retrieved November 14 2014 Hog Hunting supplies For All Your Hunting Needs Feral Hog Population Growth and Density in Texas PDF Texas A amp M AgriLife Extension October 2012 Retrieved November 6 2014 APHIS National Feral Swine Damage Management Program United States Department of Agriculture Retrieved February 3 2017 Fearing feral hog apocalypse Texas approves drastic measures CBS News February 21 2017 Retrieved February 28 2017 Linderholm Anna Spencer Daisy Battista Vincent Frantz Laurent Barnett Ross Fleischer Robert C James Helen F Duffy Dave Sparks Jed P Clements David R Andersson Leif Dobney Keith Leonard Jennifer A Larson Greger 2016 A novel MC1R allele for black coat colour reveals the Polynesian ancestry and hybridization patterns of Hawaiian feral pigs Royal Society Open Science 3 9 160304 Bibcode 2016RSOS 360304L doi 10 1098 rsos 160304 ISSN 2054 5703 PMC 5043315 PMID 27703696 Downes Lawrence May 19 2013 In pursuit of Hawaii s wild feral pigs The Seattle Times Retrieved February 10 2014 Goode Erica April 27 2013 When One Man s Game Is Also a Marauding Pest The New York Times Retrieved September 6 2017 Giuliano William M February 5 2013 Wild Hogs in Florida Ecology and Management Electronic Data Information Source Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences University of Florida Archived from the original on March 9 2016 Retrieved February 2 2016 Feral Hogs Wildlife Enemy Number One Outdoor Alabama Archived from the original on February 6 2014 Retrieved February 10 2014 Black Bears Great Smoky Mountains National Park US National Park Service Retrieved February 10 2014 Wild Hogs in Florida An Overview PDF MyFWC com Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Retrieved February 10 2014 Natural Predators of Feral Hogs eXtension Archived from the original on February 2 2016 Retrieved February 2 2016 Instituto Brasileiro do Meio Ambiente e dos Recursos Maturais Nenovaveis August 4 2005 Instrucao Normativa No 71 PDF Federal Ministerio do Meio Ambiente Brazil Retrieved February 13 2009 Javali Fronteiras rompidas Boars break across the border Globo Rural January 1994 pp 32 35 ISSN 0102 6178 Cecconi Eduardo February 13 2009 A tecnica da caca do javali Reproducao desordenada do animal e combatida com o abate Terra de Maua Archived from the original on November 19 2008 Furtado Fred February 13 2009 Invasor ou vizinho Invasor ou vizinho Estudo traz nova visao sobre interacao entre porco monteiro e seus primos do Pantanal Ciencia Hoje Archived from the original on September 6 2008 a b c Statham M Middleton M 1987 Feral pigs on Flinders Island Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania 121 121 124 doi 10 26749 rstpp 121 121 Osbourne Margaret May 17 2022 Feral Pigs May Have Helped Boost Crocodile Numbers in the Northern Territory Australia Smithsonian Retrieved May 30 2022 Ham Anthony August 15 2022 Pigs to the Rescue An Invasive Species Helped Save Australia s Crocodiles The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 15 2022 a b c Corlett Eva evacorlett September 26 2022 It s a murder scene feral pigs torment residents in New Zealand capital Farm just minutes from centre of Wellington estimates it has lost about 60 kid goats in past few months The Guardian Retrieved April 9 2023 a b Feral Hogs Attack and Kill a Woman in Texas The New York Times November 26 2019 Retrieved December 1 2019 Mayer John J April 3 2014 Wild Pig Attacks on Humans Proceedings of the 15th Wildlife Damage Management Conference Wildlife Damage Management Conference Retrieved December 6 2019 Wild pig attacks on humans University of Nebraska Lincoln Peer Reviewed Study Johnson Lauren M November 26 2019 Feral hogs in Texas attacked and killed a woman outside a home CNN Retrieved November 29 2019 External linksCoping With Feral Hogs Feral Hogs and Agriculture Archived November 9 2015 at the Wayback Machine U S distribution maps by county Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Feral pig amp oldid 1217666496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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