USDA, Cooperative Extension Providing Trapping Assistance, Education to Eradicate Feral Hogs

USDA, Cooperative Extension Providing Trapping Assistance, Education to Eradicate Feral Hogs
Mar 24, 2021
By Ryan McGeeney
 
Although the COVID-19 pandemic has slowed many human activities, it hasn’t stopped feral hogs from reproducing and causing damage. Throughout 2021, the Cooperative Extension Service, in partnership with the Arkansas Department of Agriculture, the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and other partnering organizations, is reaching out to residents to help reduce populations of the rampaging beasts.
 
Luke Lewis, Assistant Chief of the AGFC’s Wildlife Division, said that while the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted operations in multiple state agencies, the problems faced by Arkansas landowners aren’t going away.
 
“Even though COVID has slowed up human activity, it hasn’t stopped feral hogs from reproducing and causing damage,” Lewis said.
 
A U.S. Department of Agriculture publication cites a “likely conservative annual estimate” of damage from feral hogs at $1.5 billion across the United States. While feral hog populations are concentrated in the southeastern United States, there are also scattered populations in Vermont, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Virginia, California, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Hawaii and New Mexico. (See: https://bit.ly/31dXcoR.)
 
Feral hogs cause damage to row crops, pastures, and wildlife habitat. Most Arkansans who have experienced feral hog damages on their property understand the risk of their populations getting out of control.
 
Protecting property
 
A 2018 assessment conducted by the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture found that only 7 percent of landowners who reported feral hog activity on their property were very confident in their ability to protect their lands from risks associated with feral hogs. About 30 percent of landowners who reported no feral hog activity on their lands said they were confident in their abilities to protect their respective lands.
 
Becky McPeake, extension wildlife specialist for the Division of Agriculture, said that 84 percent of survey respondents reported shooting feral hogs during daylight hours, with 70 percent reporting they trapped feral hogs.
 
“We need to do everything we can, which means using whatever tools we have to reduce feral hogs,” McPeake said. “However, we need to think strategically about how and when to use those tools.”
 
She said that feral hogs tend to learn from “close calls” and further adapt to environmental threats
 
“Shooting at them at the wrong time can train the survivors to avoid people and traps, which hurts future efforts at removing them,” she said.
 
McPeake recommends that landowners prepare strategies that may include shooting and other methods after trapping “sounders.” Sounders are groups of females and their piglets, which tend to remain local. Wandering boars, in contrast, may remain in a given area for a shorter time before moving on.
 
As an educational outreach, Cooperative Extension Service agents throughout the state are available to teach residents how to employ cellular trapping systems, which involve the use of game cameras and remotely triggered gates to trap entire sounders. To contact your nearest extension agent, visit the Cooperative Extension Service directory of counties at https://www.uaex.uada.edu/counties/default.aspx.
 
Help from USDA
 
Residents with unwanted feral hogs on their property can have them removed by contacting USDA Animal Plant Health Inspection Service Wildlife Services at 501-835-2318. They are leading the statewide effort at feral hog removal, one pig at a time, with partners on the Arkansas Feral Hog Eradication Task Force.
 
Call your local county Extension office for more information about feral hogs, or to volunteer your property as a demonstration site.
Source : uaex.edu
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