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HOG WILD: SASKATCHEW­AN’S FERAL PIG PROBLEM

Canada is losing a war against feral swine that are infesting the Prairies. Time to unleash the ‘Judas pigs.’

- BY JASON MARKUSOFF ·

Last fall, cattle feedlot owner Jordan Kowal found part of his canola field gone—a strip down the centre, completely shredded. It reminded him that a section of his cow pasture had recently been trashed, too—le a mess of upturned soil and grass roots, as if a drunkard had taken a rototiller on a joyride. Kowal knew who the culprits were. The oinkers had returned.

The rancher has been seeing wild pigs come through the woods near his farm in Crooked River, Sask., for 15 years. The problem has become worse in the last five years, like it has throughout the Prairies. “I see them in the middle of the night—all of a sudden, you’ll see eyes looking at you. Shine truck lights at them and they scatter.” Once, Kowal’s kids were playing in the yard and a few piglets came running at them. The children left before the mother could come with her bearlike ferocity. “They’re pretty vicious animals,” Kowal says. “We’ve shot at some before, and they’ll keep coming at you if you don’t get out of the way.”

Feral swine are considered to be among the world’s worst invasive species—they destroy crops, befoul riverbanks and have spread a dreaded pig disease throughout Europe. They multiply rapidly (six per litter, once or twice a year) and are remarkably hard to kill. And they’re on the march in Canada. A study published in May in Nature: Sci

entific Reports featured a series of maps that show swine infestatio­n spreading like an untreated rash across the Prairie provinces. In the 1990s, the study found, 27 watershed areas had pigs; last decade, that number leapt

to 348. By 2017, there were 993 swine-infested watersheds and the pigs’ range spanned 778,000 sq. km—an area larger than Texas and New Brunswick combined. There’s no population estimate for Canada’s wild pigs, but we’re certainly not as overrun as some areas down south, like California and the Lone Star State—annual U.S. crop damage is estimated at US$1.5 billion, and collisions between vehicles and wild pigs cost US$36 million. Feral swine in that country date back to 16th-century European contact, and the population exploded in the 1980s. The problem is much newer in Canada, where some pigs first escaped or were released from fledgling wild boar farms less than three decades ago. But the increase in Canada’s wild swine is following the same trend, says the Nature study’s lead author, Ruth Aschim, a doctoral student at the University of Saskatchew­an’s College of Agricultur­e and Bioresourc­es. “Give that 10 more years and I think we’ll be seeing a completely different story.”

Ryan Brook, her co-author and supervisor, has long tracked the rise of the Canadian boar. People send him pictures and news of sightings nearly every day: a car crash in Manitoba, a half-dozen crossing the road in northeast Saskatchew­an, a hunter’s 450-lb. catch in Alberta. One Manitoba hunter reported that a er he shot a deer and dressed it, eight wild pigs ran out of the bush toward him. He shot and killed one, but the rest kept coming. He kept firing until he had two bullets le and the remaining creatures scattered into the woods. Brook has said pigs could eventually outnumber the 1.17 million people living in Saskatchew­an.

Provincial authoritie­s have been trying, failing and trying again to tame the wild pig problem. Alberta used to have hunting bounties—$50 per swine ear returned—until officials concluded that shooting one or two pigs in a “sounder” (the term for a group of swine) of about 12 makes the problem worse by teaching the rest to disperse and become more nocturnal. “These animals are very intelligen­t,” says Perry Abramenko, who leads eradicatio­n efforts with Alberta Agricultur­e and Forestry. “If you don’t catch the whole sounder at one time, any survivors that escape become trap-shy.” Alberta is testing new methods, including surveillan­ce drones and corral traps baited with oats and molasses that sometimes take two weeks to lure a full group.

In Saskatchew­an, Brook and provincial officials have used the “Judas pig” method. They equip one pig with a GPS collar, and when she or he finds the group, aerial hunters take out every boar but the collared one, who flees to find another sounder. The Saskatchew­an Crop Insurance Corp., which manages that province’s pig-hunting teams, caught more than 100 around Kowal’s feedlot, then a team coordinato­r couldn’t find any more in a couple of days of scouting. Eliminatio­n is tricky, however; Kowal says he saw a few running around near his farm in mid-May. “They should have been involved five or 10 years before,” he says of government authoritie­s.

A threat that hasn’t yet touched Canada has neverthele­ss sharpened government­s’ focus. African swine fever, which poses no risk to humans but is lethal in a hog herd, has killed more than one million pigs in China. It has spread to several countries in Europe and is much harder to control among wild swine than farm pigs—Denmark has actually erected an anti-pig fence across its border with Germany. Canada’s wild pigs could become a “significan­t potential reservoir” if the virus came to the country, says Egan Brockhoff, veterinary consultant to the Canadian Pork Council. Quebec is now working on a wild pig strategy; by July 1 the Northwest Territorie­s, watching the northward spread from Alberta, will likely declare them a pest and allow permit-free shooting; there is a growing clamour among farmers and wildlife conservati­onists for a national strategy. Canada’s swine-fever prevention plan will have elements addressing wild pigs, says Jaspinder Komal, chief veterinari­an for the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

Can an invasive species that reproduces so rapidly and evades capture so smartly be eradicated? Alberta, through method and determinat­ion, managed to make itself ratfree. Abramenko says it can do the same with feral swine, but it will take a lot of work, going location by location, trap by trap, night watch by night watch. And even then, don’t bet your bacon on it.

 ??  ?? Canada’s wild pig population has exploded; one expert predicts the pigs could eventually outnumber the 1.17 million people living in Saskatchew­an
Canada’s wild pig population has exploded; one expert predicts the pigs could eventually outnumber the 1.17 million people living in Saskatchew­an
 ??  ?? Researcher­s trap wild pigs, then release one with a GPS collar so it will lead them to other groups
Researcher­s trap wild pigs, then release one with a GPS collar so it will lead them to other groups

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