| Cogent Environmental Science | 卷:4 |
| Damage caused to rangelands by wild pig rooting activity is mitigated with intensive trapping | |
| Tyler A. Campbell1  Stephen L. Webb2  Joshua A. Gaskamp2  Kenneth L. Gee2  Nova J. Silvy3  | |
| [1] East Foundation; | |
| [2] Noble Research Institute, LLC; | |
| [3] Texas A&M University, College Station; | |
| 关键词: corral traps; drop net; eradication; feral swine; management; population control; sus scrofa; | |
| DOI : 10.1080/23311843.2018.1540080 | |
| 来源: DOAJ | |
【 摘 要 】
The wild pig (Sus scrofa), an exotic and invasive species, has caused great concern at a global scale, particularly within agricultural landscapes. The objective of this study was to determine whether intensive trapping and wild pig removal resulted in a concomitant decrease in damage to rangelands. Removal of 356 wild pigs over 2 years showed an immediate reduction in rooting damage that carried over after trapping ceased. After only one trap session, rooting damage across the three sites was reduced 43–82% and total damage reduction from the beginning to the end of the project was 90%. With intensive trapping (1 pig/22.7 ha/year), damage may also be reduced on neighboring areas that are not being trapped, as indicated by data from our non-trapped units. Although we reduced rooting damage locally, and on nearby areas, large-scale, intensive control will be needed for the long-term effective reduction in damage and wild pig numbers because wild pigs have high reproductive rates, high survival, and can recolonize areas rapidly.
【 授权许可】
Unknown