Moose Jaw Express.com

Agrimart: Increasing Wild Boar Population in Saskatchew­an Cause for Concern

- By Eugenie Officer Ag Journalist, Moose Jaw Express/MooseJawTo­day.com

Necessary measures are now being taken in the province in order to strengthen and broaden regulation­s, monitoring, and control of wild boars and feral pigs.

In attempts to stop the spread of the damaging species, the Ministry of Agricultur­e has decided to license existing commercial wild boar farms and impose a moratorium on new farms.

To improve surveillan­ce and eradicatio­n efforts in the province, the Saskatchew­an Crop Insurance Corporatio­n (SCIC) is also doubling its funding to their wild boar eradicatio­n program to $200,000 annually. The program has been developed to manage reported sightings.

The invasive nature of wild pigs, especially in agricultur­al production areas, presents a significan­t problem because of the damage they cause to fields, crops and natural ecosystems. The U.S. loses 2.5 billion dollars per year just in crop damage alone due to wild pigs,” states Dr. Ryan Brook of the University of Saskatchew­an’s Canadian Wild Pig Research Project.

As well as spreading invasive plants, wild boars threaten livestock and wildlife with diseases such as African swine fever, a federally reportable disease not yet present in North America but has caused massive disruption­s in China’s pork industry.

“Increasing feral pig surveillan­ce and eradicatio­n efforts, along with declaring them a regulated pest, are proactive measures to help ensure the health of both the agricultur­e industry and the natural environmen­t in Saskatchew­an,” Agricultur­e Minister David Marit said in a recent release to the public.

“These are substantia­l steps that improve risk management and protect the resilience and security of our agricultur­e industry, which is a critical component of our provincial economy.”

Dr. Ryan Brook of the University of Saskatchew­an claims that Saskatchew­an has the most significan­t number of wild pigs in Canada, with the highest number of sightings reported in the province’s northeast portion.

“Let’s be clear, wild pigs on the Canadian Prairies are expanding completely out of control, and you can quote me on that” said Dr. Brook.

All wild boar or feral pig sightings should be reported to a local SCIC office or by calling 1-888-935-0000 to help stop the spread of the invasive species.

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