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Author Topic: the USA ferral hog situation ....  (Read 2674 times)

Offline Rob DiStefano

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the USA ferral hog situation ....
« on: December 20, 2011, 09:50:00 AM »
OPEN FOR YOUR DISCUSSION

(the following article taken from the wildlife management institute ...)

Hog-hunting Television Shows and Silver Bullets Won't Fix the Nation's Wild Pig Problem    

 

Talk to any wildlife biologist in the southern United States about wild pigs, and you’re likely to hear something akin to at least one of the following, “They’re the four-legged equivalent of fire ants;” “If the average litter is six, typically eight survive;” “Only a fence that will hold water will hold feral hogs.” Even the most rigorous scientists are reduced to using these tongue-in-cheek aphorisms to describe the harsh reality and seemingly apocalyptic future of North America’s second-most harvested mammalian game species, reports the Wildlife Management Institute.

No other domesticated animal becomes feral so easily and survives more adaptively than the swine. Often labeled the “ultimate generalist,” the pig’s spread throughout North America via a biological trifecta of high reproductive potential, climate tolerance and ability to re-organize entire ecosystems has resulted in something not unlike a pandemic.  According to those who have witnessed the wild pig’s march across the continent, the invasion is best characterized as an “ecological train wreck.”

Forty-five states and four Canadian provinces are currently grappling with the environmental and financial calamity brought about by the feral, wild or hybrid pigs within their borders. Though population estimates are difficult to determine, most experts believe that North America is home to between three and six million wild pigs.

“They can live in just about any habitat; anywhere from the Canadian Prairie Provinces down to the deserts of Mexico and all parts in between,” said Dr. Jack Mayer, research scientist and manager at the Savannah River National Laboratory. According to Mayer, three distinct types of wild pigs reside in North America.  First is the feral pig, originating from domesticated stock brought to Florida by Hernando de Soto in the mid-1500s.  Second is the pure Eurasian wild boar, introduced to the continent by hunters in the late 1800s.  Last is  the hearty, hybridized hog, resulting from crosses of the two parent strains.  Wildlife managers collectively refer to all three types of invasive swine simply as wild pigs.

The feral pig/wild boar hybrid is by far the most prolific of the three strains and likely the most adaptive. “Virtually every habitat in North America is represented in the wild boar’s native range in Eurasia,” notes Dr. Ben West, the western region director for the University of Tennessee Extension. “Thus, there is huge genetic potential in the hybrid pig.” According to West and other wildlife biologists, the hybrid wild pig’s ability to adapt and thrive in habitats of all major ecosystems in the United States is likely unlimited and largely unknown.

The wild pig’s capacity to increase its numbers and expand its range is unparalleled among North America’s invasive mammals. Females are capable of reproducing at six months of age and can produce up to three litters a year. Though the typical litter averages six, sows can give birth to as many as a dozen under good conditions. Surprisingly, female pigs can breed well into their teens; researchers have documented pregnant sows as old as 14. This reproductive proficiency combined with an absence of natural predators has allowed many wild pig populations to double in as little as four months.

According to data collected by the Southeast Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study, wild pig populations in the U.S. have irrupted in the last 30 years. In 1982, 475 counties in 17 states contained wild pigs. By 2004, the number of counties reporting wild pigs had risen to 1,014. Based on current estimates, those numbers are on a fast track to double again in the near future. As prophesized by one Texas Parks and Wildlife game warden, “There’s only two kinds of folks—those who have hogs and those who will have ‘em.”

Given the level of ecological and agricultural destruction currently being waged by hogs, the future cost of managing their swelling populations will pose a major challenge to already fiscally strapped state fish and wildlife agencies.

Recent estimates of the damage done to natural and agricultural resources by wild pigs approach $1.5 billion annually, with heavily infested states such as Texas suffering nearly $52 million of swine-caused wreckage every year. The bulk of the damage stems from the pigs rooting through vegetation and soil in search of roots, tubers, invertebrates and crops. The resulting tilling effect destroys agricultural land, disturbs native plant communities, causes erosion and, as is the case in Hawaii, creates standing water hollows that serve as breeding grounds for non-native mosquito species. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the explosion of disease harboring mosquito populations in Hawaii has had a devastating effect on the island’s already declining native bird populations.

The wild pigs’ destructive feeding behavior poses a particular threat to sensitive wildlife species and their habitats. According to studies by researchers at Texas A&M University, wetlands and riparian areas suffer the most damage from wild pigs. In some areas, nearly 50 percent of the habitat is significantly degraded by the hogs’ rooting and wallowing. Additionally, these wet areas also are experiencing increased bacterial contamination in the form of E. coli and fecal coliform from the ever-present pigs.

“Hogs are deadly to anything that nests on the ground,” stated West.  “One of the best examples is the depredation of sea turtle eggs on Ossabaw Island.” Before the Georgia Department of Natural Resources (GDNR) began an intensive wild pig removal program on Ossabaw, a barrier island south of Savannah, sea turtle nests on the islands’ sandy beaches suffered greater than 30 percent mortality. Today, as a result of the GDNR removing nearly 3,000 hogs from the island annually, those nests experience less than 5 percent mortality.

Interestingly, researchers also documented a significant increase in the body weight of Ossabaw’s white-tailed deer following wild pig reduction efforts. This fact, along with other research conducted in southeastern hardwood forests, demonstrates that wild pigs present a formidable source of competition for dozens of native wildlife and plant species. Largely due to the pigs’ habit of bulldozing seedlings and rooting for mast crops, such as acorns, these forested areas are experiencing dramatic change.  Hardwood regeneration has nearly halted and many wildlife species are outcompeted for critical resources.

Unfortunately, the wild pig’s impact on native mammals is not restricted to increased competition or habitat destruction. Hogs harbor numerous diseases as well as internal and external parasites that are transmissible to wildlife, livestock and even humans. Many of these diseases, such as brucellosis, tuberculosis and the pseudorabies virus have been the target of national disease-eradication programs for livestock. As wild pig numbers continue to increase and spread to new areas, biologists are concerned that their efforts to eradicate or reduce the prevalence of these diseases in wild and domestic animals will be in vain. In addition, researchers at the USDA National Wildlife Disease Center note the possibly insurmountable challenge of controlling an “accidental or intentional outbreak of a foreign animal disease, such as foot and mouth, rinderpest, African swine fever or classical swine fever” if those diseases were ever to find their way into the wild pig population.

To date, no single technique used to control the spread or overall numbers of wild pigs has proven successful—a fact not lost on disease specialists and wildlife managers.  According to West, 50 to 70 percent of a wild pig population must be removed each year to stabilize or begin reducing it. Unfortunately, hunting and other lethal control methods account for only 20 percent a year on average. Even more frustrating to wildlife managers is the fact that hunters are the one’s largely responsible for the viral spread of wild pigs to new geographic regions across the country.

Given that the wild pig is listed as an invasive animal in most states, hunters are presented with a nearly unlimited and often year-round season during which to harvest hogs. This, unfortunately, has led many individuals to shuttle and re-stock wild pigs illegally into new areas. In an interesting and somewhat contradictory move in 2009, several states, including Kansas and Nebraska, actually outlawed the hunting of wild pigs in an effort to halt their spread. By eliminating the opportunity to hunt, these states hope to remove the incentive to introduce wild pigs. Time will tell if the effort proves successful.

Currently, significant research is being conducted on swine-specific toxins to aid in the control of wild pigs. Ironically, the most promising of these new products, commercially known as Hog-Gone®, is a concentrated form of sodium nitrite, the most common pork preservative used worldwide. While initial results look promising, it is likely that no silver bullet exists to rid North America’s diverse habitats of the wild pig. According to West and other wildlife biologists, only constant monitoring and unified efforts between hunters, landowners and wildlife management agencies can protect native ecosystems from the invasion of the wild pig. In the words of Michael Bodenchuk, State Director of the Texas USDA Wildlife Services, “We’re not going to barbeque our way out of this problem.”
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Offline Red4arm

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #1 on: December 20, 2011, 10:07:00 AM »
Here in TN they outlawed hunting unless your the land owner or  a few select wma hunts. Everyone raised heck about it, but it is the first step in stopping the spread. They found here that hog populations would pop up in areas with hogs no where nearby. The hunters were releasing them to hunt.
It was already illegal to release them, but difficult to enforce. Where a hunting ban on them is easier to enforce.
Land owners can shot them and get assistance from the state with trapping.
Everyone wants to hunt pigs, I love to hunt them too and have taken 9. But I have seen what they do to the deer and turkey habitat. Not to mention what they do to other non game animals.
If you don't have em, you REALLY don't want em.

Offline ARCHER2

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #2 on: December 20, 2011, 10:08:00 AM »
We have our share of them here in Louisiana. They are good eat'in if you don't mind cleaning them. I took one last season and have enjoyed it all year.
            Charlie
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Offline Gottabow

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #3 on: December 20, 2011, 10:16:00 AM »
Well they (DNR) say they are hear in Wisconsin but I have yet to see one.  From what I hear its hard to get land owners permission to hunt the ones that are here.  I think the Crop Damage Subcities (spelling?) that the Farmers get help perpetuate the problem here.

Online Orion

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #4 on: December 20, 2011, 10:17:00 AM »
Interesting stuff.  It's unfortunate that people have a lot to do with the spread of hogs into areas where they didn't exist before.  It's selfish and short sighted.  We should have learned by now that it's not smart to fool with mother nature. There are feral hogs/pigs in  southwestern Wisconsin now where they've never been before.  It's not known at this time whether they escaped local farming operations or were brought here from outside the state.

Thanks to "man's" actions, we also now have chronic wasting disease in deer in Wisconsin.  The disease was trucked in in the form of infected deer from Alberta to improve the gene pool by some Quality Deer Management zealots.  Of course, when it was done, Wisconsin had little regulation governing the importation of deer and even less enforcement, with jurisdictional/enforcement issues between the DNR and Department of Agriculture.  

And so it goes. Whether it's plants, fish, animals, etc., man's tinkering and efforts to control or improve on mother nature almost always make ithings worse.

Offline Doc Nock

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #5 on: December 20, 2011, 10:18:00 AM »
NRA American Hunter just received did a number of articles, and some of the above cited data is included, but I sensed a far more "hunter friendly" view of "opportunity" in their articles.

What Red4arm writes is provocative and illuminating. I read about "outlawing hunting" and wondered "What the...?" but this makes sense...the culprit is hunters introducing them (hear all the time people wanting them closer to hunt off-season) and now I understand why they made hunting illegal: remove the incentive to do illegal stocking!

Amazing! WE've really fouled our nest with our own perverse interests at heart.

Thanks Rob for sharing.
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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #6 on: December 20, 2011, 10:22:00 AM »
Thanks Rob for they very informative update.

Have not encountered any wild hogs in my area as of yet. I am of the population of folks that will have them.

Ironic that they are plentiful in the adjacent county on ground which is leased to a private hunting organization.

KY does have year around hunting for wild hogs.
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Offline tuscarawasbowman

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #7 on: December 20, 2011, 10:22:00 AM »
Ohio has taken a strong nosed approach to combat any chance of hog populations in this state. Maybe it's inevitable and I know there are some in the southern portion of the state but no closed season and no weapons restrictions is a good combative measure same with coyotes.

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #8 on: December 20, 2011, 10:28:00 AM »
I love to hunt pigs and shoot several each year at my lease. I also see some of the destructive activity. As a hunter and land leaser I love the pigs. But I also understand that the land owners and farmers (the ones whose property/crops are being destroyed) want them eradicated. I also see the biologists views of why they need to be eradicated. As long as they are on the land I lease though I will continue to hunt them.

One more note: In the article it said "hunters" are partly responsible for the spread of the pigs because they illegally release them into areas where they had not previously existed. In my opinion that is a bad description of these people. They are actually criminals who happen to hunt! I would no more condone their activity then I would a poacher or bank robber.

See ya later,

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Offline owlbait

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #9 on: December 20, 2011, 10:58:00 AM »
I'd love to hunt hogs, but not at the cost of perpetuating their population due to demand. Outfitters, tradition, what have you, hogs should be treated like roughfish and other invasive species. Kill them on sight, no limits, and quit passing on the young. Shoot those little squelers! I never pass on a carp, gar, or dogfish because it is "too small". I like shooting fish, but I like improving the habitat for more desireable species even more. Of course, it is easy for this Michigan boy to say this, we don't have widespread hogs to hunt. Even so, if it meant less competetion for our whitetails and other animals....
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Offline lpcjon2

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #10 on: December 20, 2011, 11:09:00 AM »
Its amazing how much time and money goes into researching how it all came about. But how much time and money goes into solving the problem. Im sure the govt will find profit in the situation and hold off on a salution.JMHO
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Offline Stick n' String

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #11 on: December 20, 2011, 11:09:00 AM »
I hunt a 24,000 acre ranch in deep south Texas which pigs have inhabited for many years, despite inarguably harsh range conditions. This year we have killed over 300 (90 in one day out of a helicopter during a game survey) and have barely dented the population. Pigs are fun animals to hunt, especially with a bow. However, they can and will "take over" if given the chance. Liberal Harvesting of pigs by hunters does little but turn the survivors nocturnal.

Offline Cyclic-Rivers

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #12 on: December 20, 2011, 11:13:00 AM »
Its like all things.

People Ruin it for themselves through selfishness and short sightedness.

I wouldnt hesitate to try and shoot a pig if I see one in NY but on an ecological standpoint, I hope I never have that opportunity.
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Offline Stick n' String

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #13 on: December 20, 2011, 11:17:00 AM »
As a side note, banning hunting for pigs with the exception of set "seasons" is lunacy. Certainly, banning the hunting of hogs is a dis-incentive to their introduction by hunting clubs. However, I can assure you that all restrictions should be removed when addressing the harvest of this species once they have a foothold. In Texas you can hunt wild hogs any time, day or night, without limitation or restriction. You can even shoot them from a helicopter or from a roadway. Spotlighting? Sure! Aside from providing quite a bit of fun and giving me a good reason to purchase an AR-15 with a high capacity magazine, the pigs are still winning in this state.

Offline Rick Butler

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #14 on: December 20, 2011, 11:36:00 AM »
I was hunting this fall in the Gratiot-Saginaw SGA here in Michigan.  This is one of the areas where feral pigs were first discovered a few years ago, and a number(not many) have been killed.  Anyway this fall I found this notice tacked to a tree in one of the parking areas.
 
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Offline Robertfishes

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #15 on: December 20, 2011, 11:44:00 AM »
5 years ago a guy released 65 wildhogs on our hunt club, I begged him not to I told him it would ruin our deer  hunting. Now we have hogs everywhere but they mostly move at night so they hardly get shot..we now have a bunch of bears, you can see bears with 3 cubs..the  bears love to eat little hogs...We have less deer and turkeys now too. I shoot every hog I can, only 4 this year..

Offline Flingblade

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #16 on: December 20, 2011, 12:15:00 PM »
I don't want to see the hog population spread but I wish I could get in on the hunting without the long drive from Michigan.  They say they ruin the habitat and damage game populations so I wonder why south Texas is a go to destination for big whitetails?  Obviously the presence of hogs has not ruined the whitetail population in south Texas.
As for crop depredation payments made to farmers; I think farmers should be required to list their land as public hunting in order to receive payment for crop damage by wildlife.  Many farmers receive the payments but will not allow hunters to help control the populations and reduce the damage.

Offline robtattoo

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #17 on: December 20, 2011, 12:17:00 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Stick n' String:
As a side note, banning hunting for pigs with the exception of set "seasons" is lunacy. Certainly, banning the hunting of hogs is a dis-incentive to their introduction by hunting clubs. However, I can assure you that all restrictions should be removed when addressing the harvest of this species once they have a foothold. In Texas you can hunt wild hogs any time, day or night, without limitation or restriction. You can even shoot them from a helicopter or from a roadway. Spotlighting? Sure! Aside from providing quite a bit of fun and giving me a good reason to purchase an AR-15 with a high capacity magazine, the pigs are still winning in this state.
Which kind of proves the point. In Texas anyone & everyone can hunt hogs. It's a well publicised & advertised species to travel to hunt. If you want to hunt hogs, everyone knows that Texas is the place to go.
If I remember correctly, there are more hogs killed in Texas than any other State, yet Texas STILL has the highest population of feral hogs in the country.
There are ANNUAL hunts on single properties where hundreds of pigs are killed every year. Next year, people turn up & do the exact same thing, on the exact same property.

That's in itself is pretty much every ounce of proof you need to be able to say that encouraging hunting as a species control method, simply does not work.
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Offline robtattoo

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #18 on: December 20, 2011, 12:23:00 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Flingblade:
I don't want to see the hog population spread but I wish I could get in on the hunting without the long drive from Michigan.  They say they ruin the habitat and damage game populations so I wonder why south Texas is a go to destination for big whitetails?  Obviously the presence of hogs has not ruined the whitetail population in south Texas.
Because a majority of Texas is Privately owned & fenced. Deer are bought in annually & released. I'm categorically NOT saying there is anything wrong with this, by the way & I'm NOT talking about 'canned' hunting.
Deer farming is very big business in Texas.
You've also got to consider the sheer size of the country. There's a heck of a lot room out there for hogs & deer to cohabit.
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Offline L. Harris

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Re: the USA ferral hog situation ....
« Reply #19 on: December 20, 2011, 12:37:00 PM »
I would love to help out any rancher/farmer to get rid of some hogs! I have personally heard several crying about how much damage is being done to their land and crops. However when you approach them about helping them out by allowing you to come hunt the hogs, the answer is always, sure! $100.00 a day and you can hunt all you want. Some even want to charge a dollar a pound for any weighing over 150#s. They must not need the hogs gone too bad or they wouldn't be charging a healthy fee. I am on a very fixed income so I can't afford to "help" these poor farmers out.
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