Farm Progress

USDA feral swine campaign looks to eliminate feral swine from two states every three to five years and stabilize feral swine damage within 10 years.

Farm Press Staff

April 16, 2014

3 Min Read

The USDA launched earlier this month a national effort to reduce the devastating damage caused by feral swine.  The $20 million program aims to help states deal with a rapidly expanding population of invasive wild swine that causes $1.5 billion in annual damage and control costs.

“Feral swine are one of the most destructive invaders a state can have,” said USDA Undersecretary Edward Avalos.  “They have expanded their range from 17 to 39 states in the last 30 years and cause damage to crops, kill young livestock, destroy property, harm natural resources, and carry diseases that threaten other animals as well as people and water supplies. It’s critical that we act now to begin appropriate management of this costly problem.”

Alabama farmer Harold Gaines hopes the new federal program will help him get some sleep during planting season. Gaines said last spring, he and his sons, Levi and Dan, worked around the clock to protect fields from feral swine that rooted up seeds and destroyed crops, he told the Alabama Farmers Federation.

“We worked 14-hour days planting, and then the three of us took shifts through the night to guard the fields,” Gaines said. “We can’t continue that on a long-term basis.”

The Wildlife Services program of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service will tailor activities to each state’s circumstance and work with other federal, state, tribal and local groups. WS will work directly with states to control populations, test animals for diseases, and research better methods of managing feral swine damage.  A key part of the national program will include surveillance and disease monitoring to protect the health of our domestic swine.

Feral swine have become a serious problem in 78 percent of all states in the country, carrying diseases that can affect people, domestic animals, livestock and wildlife, as well as local water supplies. They also cause damage to field and high-value crops of all kinds from Midwestern corn and soybeans to Southern crops such sugar cane, peanuts, spinach and pumpkins.

“In addition to the costly damage to agricultural and natural resources, the diseases these animals carry present a real threat to our swine populations,” said Avalos. “Feral swine are able to carry and transmit up to 30 diseases and 37 different parasites to livestock, people, pets and wildlife, so surveillance and disease monitoring is another keystone to this program.”

To contain damage within a decade

APHIS will test feral swine for diseases of concern for U.S. pork producers, such as classical swine fever, which does not exist in the United States, as well as swine brucellosis, porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome, swine influenza, and pseudorabies.  Ensuring that domestic swine are not threatened by disease from feral swine helps ensure that U.S. export markets remain open.   

APHIS aims to have the program operating within 6 months and funding for the comprehensive project includes, among other things:

  • $9.5 million for state projects.

  • $1.4 million for establishing procedures for disease monitoring, including the development of new surveillance and vaccination methods.

  • $1.5 million for WS’ National Wildlife Research Center to conduct research and economic analyses to improve control practices

  • $1.6 million for the centralization of control operations, and for making them safer and more cost-effective.

Initial state funding levels will be based on current feral swine populations and associated damage to resources.  Because feral swine populations, like most wildlife, cross international borders, APHIS will also coordinate with Canada and Mexico on feral swine damage management.

“We’ve already begun this type of work through a pilot program in New Mexico,” said Avalos.  “Through this pilot program, we have successfully removed feral swine from 5.3 million acres of land.  By applying the techniques such as trap monitors and surveillance cameras we have developed through this pilot project, we aim to eliminate feral swine from two states every three to five years and stabilize feral swine damage within 10 years.”

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