Feral Hogs in Minnesota: Where Do They Roam and Are They Dangerous?
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Feral Hogs in Minnesota: Where Do They Roam and Are They Dangerous?

Jul 02, 2023

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40 out of 50 states of the United States have a big invasive species problem. The species? Feral hogs. Known variously as feral or wild hogs, boars, or pigs or as razorbacks in some parts of the country, these animals were first introduced into the wild by early explorers but now number in the millions. They are aggressive, unpredictable, and territorial. They’re omnivores that will attack and eat animals bigger than themselves. Annually, they cost farmers billions of dollars in destruction to crops, infrastructure, and lost livestock. In suburban communities, they are a threat to pets and children and create property damage to fencing and landscaping. Are there feral hogs in Minnesota? Where have they been found and what can be done about them?

Swine are not indigenous to North and South America but were brought there by early European explorers and colonials. Christopher Columbus brought them with him on his voyages to the New World and deliberately released them on Caribbean islands so they would multiply and provide a familiar food source for future explorers running low on provisions. As colonies in the islands and on the North American mainland grew, domestic pigs escaped from farms and helped grow the feral herds. Finally, in modern times, feral hogs have been introduced accidentally or intentionally by game hunters in distant parts of the country. In some cases, they have escaped from game reserves that were improperly fenced. In other cases, individuals have illegally released them to start a local hunting population. Southern states such as Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana have the largest wild boar populations, but these animals are extremely hardy and have spread as far north as Canada.

The good news for Minnesota is that the state has no known breeding populations of feral hogs. Recently escaped domestic pigs were discovered in the West Valley Wildlife Management Area in Marshall County, which is in the northwestern part of the state. These were traced back to the farm they escaped from, and after being warned, the owner was charged, convicted, and fined. The biggest concern for Minnesota is that feral herds may migrate into the state from neighboring states or from Canada.

Although feral hogs in Minnesota are not a current problem, they are something that needs to be monitored and controlled, because they can quickly get out of hand. These are some of the problems they can cause:

Feral pigs are bad-tempered and unpredictable, especially when they are in mating season or think their young might be threatened. They attack animals or people larger than themselves, using their tusks and teeth to bite and gore. It's quite possible for a large boar to kill a person if wounds like this sever an artery. Swine are omnivorous. Not only will they eat small wild mammals, reptiles, and birds, but they will also attack young livestock such as lambs or even calves for food. They are a great danger to pets or children who may cross their paths while walking in the woods.

Feral pigs can carry up to 34 different serious infectious diseases. These can be transmitted to other animals or people through close contact, bites, drinking contaminated water, or eating contaminated pork. Hunters in states where hunting boar is legal must take careful precautions when butchering and cooking wild pork. Pig farmers are greatly concerned that feral populations could one day bring back swine flu, a respiratory infection that is deadly for pigs and was only eradicated with a tremendous effort in 1978. Feral populations could transmit such a disease rapidly from one farm to another across a wide area.

Wild pigs will eat all sorts of crops without discrimination, including rice, wheat, corn, soybeans, melons, carrots, pumpkins, and spinach, or roots, legumes, tubers, and low-hanging or fallen fruit from trees and vines. They can make quick work of an entire potato field or uproot thousands of dollars worth of floral landscaping and turf at a private home, park, or golf course. They also strip bark from trees and vines by chewing on them or rubbing against them to scratch themselves (they are often itchy due to parasites). Insects and diseases are able to get into trees and plants when their bark is rubbed away. Feral hogs are heavy and strong, so they can break down fences or shove their way under them to get to food, water, or domestic animals on the other side. They root around through fields and pastures creating a muddy mess and leaving deep ruts that are hazardous for livestock or farm equipment trying to move through the area. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, feral pigs cause over $1.5 billion in damage every year to farms in the United States.

Even if feral hogs in Minnesota or other places never came near humans at all, they still do incalculable damage to the natural environment in wild spaces. Studies have shown that on average, biodiversity in forests that have wild pigs is 25% lower than in pigless forests. This is because pigs root through the soil of the forest floor, overturning plants, grasses, and saplings and leaving behind a muddy mess that doesn't have time to grow back before they’re rooting there again. They snuffle into underground burrows of ground-nesting animals, eating them if they can catch them. They are especially disruptive to ground-nesting game birds like pheasants and quail.

Herds of feral hogs are disastrous for water sources as well. They wade and lay down in the shallows of water sources, contaminating them with mud, feces, and urine. This makes the water undrinkable for some distance downstream and drives off fish, turtles, frogs, and other freshwater species.

©Slatan/Shutterstock.com

Even though Minnesota does not have a problem with feral hogs at the moment, wildlife officials carefully monitor for them to make sure they don't cross over from other states or from Canada, are not illegally released, and do not escape from pig farms. States that do have multiplying populations try to keep track of them through a combination of citizen reports, tracking with canines and animal experts, observing areas of damage that indicate the presence of a herd, doing aerial surveillance, and using trail cameras. Feral hogs can be difficult to keep track of when their numbers are still small.

Property owners and state and local governments in areas that are badly affected by wild hogs sometimes invest in fencing. For it to work, though, it has to be super strong, tall and buried several feet in the ground at the bottom to prevent the pigs from rooting under it. Sometimes barbed wire or electrified fencing is used. This can be an expensive solution to the problem and it requires consistent maintenance.

Many states allow the hunting and trapping of wild hogs by properly-licensed game hunters. This seems like an obvious solution. It is, after all, how other numerous species like deer are controlled in much of the country. However, other states forbid hunting wild boar for some good reasons:

For these reasons, it is illegal to hunt feral hogs in Minnesota. If you are a hunter and want to add a wild boar to your achievements, 28 other states do allow it and you can learn more about them at this site.

©Maksim Safaniuk/Shutterstock.com

Wildlife officials often prefer trapping to hunting. Traps work 24/7. One person can set and monitor a lot of them over a large area. This makes them less labor-intensive and time-intensive than hunting with firearms or bowhunting. A problem with trapping is the possibility of capturing the wrong species, even when traps are designed and placed in such a way as to make that outcome less likely.

Poisoning and sterilization are two other methods of control. Each of these involves putting out chemical-laced hog feed in areas herds frequent. Depending on what is put out, this can be intended either to kill the animals or to sterilize the males for a 30-day timespan so they cannot reproduce as quickly. Each of these is problematic. It introduces a toxic chemical into the environment that could be passed from the pig carcass to other animals that might feed on it. And contraceptives must be repeated for the same animal every month to stop all reproduction. So neither of these is a complete and flawless solution to the problem.

©Jarosław Pocztarski / CC BY 2.0 – License

Feral hogs in Minnesota and around the country are a manmade problem that will ultimately require a manmade solution. This invasive species has demonstrated its ability to multiply explosively in all sorts of different ecosystems. In terms of natural selection, the only way to deal with such a species is to replace it with a stronger species that is better able to take its place in the environment. Unless we’re prepared to release large numbers of bears, wolves, and mountain lions into every part of the country, it is up to human beings to be the apex predator in this situation, reverse our mistake, and remove these creatures as humanely as possible from the environment.

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