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  1. #1

    Birth control for hogs

    No success yet with birth control for feral hogs By BETSY BLANEY Associated Press Writer tcdacmd="cc=lcn; dt"; var hosted_site ="TXSAE"; var hosted_section ="STATE"; hosted_ad('@x96'); Advertisement hosted_ad_pop('@x03'); //> //> LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) -- There's a saying that when a feral hog has six piglets, only eight are expected to survive. That's no joke in Texas, however, where the 400-pound beasts do an estimated $50 million in damage to crops and property each year. Texas has half the nation's feral hogs, but they're now found in about 38 other states, up from fewer than 20 states 15 years ago. One Texas researcher had hoped to slow their rapid reproduction with a birth control pill, but that hasn't worked out well. Two compounds proved ineffective. One required a very exact dose to work, and the other wore off too soon, said Duane Kraemer, a Texas A&M University veterinarian and researcher. There also are the problems of getting the hogs to take the drug, keeping it from other animals and ensuring humans who eat hog meat aren't harmed. "You always wish you could solve the problem quickly," said Kraemer, who has been working on hog birth control options for about 18 months. "I know it's not a simple problem or else someone would have done it already." The problem keeps getting worse in the nation's second-largest agricultural state. Descended from domesticated pigs who escaped, the hairy-backed hogs are found in nearly all of Texas' 254 counties. They can produce three litters in two years, the piglets can reproduce six months after birth, and the animals have no natural predators. Hunters in Texas can kill wild hogs any time, but their population is so huge and they reproduce so quickly, the problem can't be solved with a rifle. "We killed one, but the next day 15 came to the funeral," joked Zachary Yanta, an exasperated farmer who takes his dogs into the fields at night to try to kill the beasts on his property in Runge, 60 miles southeast of San Antonio. Armed with razor-sharp tusks, the hogs shred fields and pastures and wreck ecosystems by wallowing in riverbeds and streams. Even perennials planted at graves aren't safe. Kraemer's work is on hold after two federal agencies rejected his applications for grants to keep going. "They are concerned, but they don't think we can deliver it," he said. Even if he found an effective drug, there remains the problem of how to get sows to take it, while keeping it away from deer and other animals. A group of A&M students is working on this, and Kraemer expects a report from them at the end of the semester. Michael Bodenchuk, state director of Texas Wildlife Services, said one option might be injecting the drug into a walnut. "The hog is the only one with jaws strong enough to crack it," he said. Bodenchuk said he would like to see a contraceptive used to help reduce the wild hog population. But officials also would need to ensure leftover doses or residue in animal waste didn't cause long-term environmental damage by getting into the soil or water. There's also the question of what happens to someone who eats a hog with oral contraceptives in her system. Unappealing as the hogs look as they crash through brush, some high-end grocery chains sell "wild boar" for up to $18 a pound. While researchers scramble for solutions, the hog population is expected to grow even more rapidly as Texas has emerged from a nearly two-year drought that likely kept the population down. With more moisture will come more vegetation and underbrush where piglets can hide and breed. "They will bounce back quickly with the rains we've been having and will probably do extremely well this year," said Kirby Brown, executive vice president of the Texas Wildlife Association. Yanta is looking at losing more crops: The hogs' sense of smell is so keen they can go down a row of corn and with precision pick out each kernel planted. But there are other costs as well. Equipment gets damaged when it rolls over holes, at times 1.5 feet deep and 4 feet wide, from the hogs' rooting. "It looks really like a mine field," Yanta said. "It costs a lot to go ahead to repair the soil afterward." © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy. Click here for copyright permissions! 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  2. #2
    Well I know the article says there are a lot of hogs in Texas and yet I'm still waiting to see one. I have about 13 acres in la vernia and I haven't seen any pigs. I need pigggggg. Wannna shoot itttttt

  3. #3
    I feel the same way rubsal70, we hunt at one location and run plenty of feed, have a pile of stinky grain, water tanks, apples, you name it and the pigs dont dome near, only deer, most people would see that as a good thing, but I prefer to shooting a nice fat pig all year round imstead of hunting deer Nov thru jan. What kind of ways are you trying to do to attract the hogs, I know it's a small place but if your neighbors got hogs, those suckers are bound to move around if they can find what they want on your property.

  4. #4
    Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't Bobcats,Mt Lions and yote's natural predators to hogsof all sizes? Not to mention the birds of prey on piglets. As far as I know, hogs will start to reproduce as soon as 8 months old and their gestation period is 120 days. Either my math is wrong or......................but every 120 days is 4 months and even if they got impregnated every 5 months and not every 3 that still comes out to 4.8 litters in 2 yrs not 3. Things to ponder on...........................................

  5. #5
    The best method of birth control for hogs is a carbon...or lead injection!!! LMAO!!!

  6. #6
    I believe Texas A & M University researchers are very good at what they do, probably what they are trying to say is that "wild hogs" can reproduce at 6-8 months as not all hogs are the same and can at least have 3 litters in two years at the minimun or more if the food supply is there, in this case here in Texas with all the rain the chances of hogs reproducing at a maximun rate is porbably pretty good, either way, at least someone is working on this "hog problem" from a scientific perspective and trying to come up with a logical solution.

 

 

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