WV Farm Bureau Magazine February 2015 | Page 15

WVU Update Published as a Special Insert for Farm Bureau News Winter 2015 Feral swine in West Virginia O ver the past 25 years, the feral swine population in the United States has increased, and their geographic range is expanding at unnatural rates. Until recently, wild boars were big game and restricted to the southern West Virginia coalfields. Over time, small feral swine populations have begun to pop up outside of those coalfields. Swine are not native to West Virginia (or even North America), and are wreaking havoc on our native wildlife, plants, and habitats. Besides man, feral pigs are considered the greatest vertebrate modifier of natural communities. Although not presently recognized as highly damaging in West Virginia, estimates suggest that feral pigs in the United States cause more than $1 billion in damages each year. The damage to agricultural and natural resources is a result of wallowing, aggressive rooting, and feeding behaviors. About feral swine Feral swine (free roaming pigs commonly known as feral hogs or feral pigs) are found in 20 counties. Many of these pigs are the wild descendants of domestic pigs introduced into the coastal areas of the southeastern Feral swine populations by county Hancock About wild boars In West Virginia, feral swine have different origins. Wild boars form a geographically concentrated population in the four-county area of Boone, Raleigh, Logan, and Wyoming counties. This population was originally introduced in 1971, when 30 wild boars were released in southern West Virginia with the intent to supplement big game hunting opportunities. This four-county area remains the only portion of the state with a boar hunting season. While these wild boars are the same species as feral swine and as domesticated pigs (Sus scrofa), differences exist in their appearance and natural history. Feral swine impact Brooke Ohio Marshall Monongalia Wetzel Doddridge Harrison Ritchie Barbour Calhoun Gilmer Tucker Hampshire Grant Hardy Upshur Jackson Randolph Roane Putnam Pendleton Braxton Webster Clay Cabell Kanawha Wayne Mineral Taylor Lewis Wirt Mason Berkeley Preston Pleasants Wood Morgan Marion Tyler Nicholas Pocahontas Jefferson Feral swine compete with native wildlife species for food resources – especially acorns, beech nuts, and other seeds important to wildlife and forest renewal. As oppurtunistic omnivores, feral pigs can also be predators of frogs, salamanders, snakes, turtles, small mammals, ground nesting birds, and white-tailed deer fawns. Lincoln Boone Fayette Greenbrier Mingo Logan Feral Swine Report Raleigh Wyoming McDowell Summers Mercer Monroe Wild Boar Area Both United States by European explorers in the 16th century. These animals have been introduced into the wilds of West Virginia, either accidentally or intentionally. Feral pigs are highly mobile and carry many diseases and parasites that infect other wildlife, livestock, and humans. While vaccinations and careful animal husbandry have nearly eliminated many diseases from domestic livestock, feral swine still harbor these diseases and can continue to infect the domestic – continued on page iii – Insert Provided by WVU Extension Service and Davis College of Ag., Natural Resources, and Design Winter 2015 West Virginia Farm Bureau News 15