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Message
Wild hogs chomp and stomp their way through $90 million worth of Louisiana crops
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:28 am
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:28 am
quote:
Feral hogs are trampling, digging and eating their way through a growing number of farms, causing more than $90 million worth of damage to Louisiana-grown rice, sugar cane and other crops each year.
Louisiana's growers reported the highest increase of wild pig activity among southern states over the past three years, according to a new study led by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. While half of farmers surveyed in the 11-state study area reported some increase, about 87% of Louisiana farmers said pig sightings and damage had grown since 2020.
That’s no surprise, said Michael Salassi, an agricultural economist with the Louisiana State University AgCenter.
“The hogs are increasing pretty fast,” he said. “Just to keep the population level, we’d need to kill 70% of them every year. Obviously, that’s not happening.”
Hunters manage to kill only a third of the state's feral hogs every year. Current estimates put the number of hogs at about 900,000, making their population larger than New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Lafayette combined.
Descendants of domesticated pigs, feral hogs cause widespread destruction in croplands, forests and coastal wetlands. They also gobble up imperiled varieties of salamanders and turtles and raid the nests of shorebirds, wild turkeys and alligators.
Feral hogs eat so many acorns that few are left for deer, ducks and turkeys during lean winter months.
Some streams in central Louisiana have had dangerous levels of bacteria from an abundance of feral hog poop.
The USDA study, published last month in the journal Agriculture, was based on surveys distributed to nearly 12,000 growers of corn, soybeans, wheat, rice, peanuts and sorghum in California, Missouri and most southern states. Across the 11 states, annual crop damage from hogs reached almost $700 million.
“Our findings suggest that the economic burden of wild pigs on producers of these crops is substantial and not limited to the direct and most identifying categories of crop damage,” such as rooting and trampling, the study said. In Louisiana, hogs are also causing more than $1 million of damage to farm fencing and equipment each year, the study found.
Hog losses for the six crops examined in the study totaled $17 million per year in Louisiana, but the full scope of damage to all agricultural products in the state was more than $91 million, according to Salassi, who led a Louisiana-focused study of hog damage in 2022.
Hardest hit were soybeans, rice, corn and sugar cane, he said.
Louisiana farmers recently suffered through a long-running drought estimated to have cost the agricultural and timber industries nearly $1.7 billion. The drought was plenty bad, but bouts of extreme weather come and go, Salassi said. Hogs cause trouble every year and will do so indefinitely.
“One hog can produce two litters every year,” he said. “So that’s one hog making 24 hogs per year. That just shows you how bad this is going to be.”
Hunting, poisoning, trapping and other control measures aren’t doing nearly enough to reduce the hogs’ numbers.
In 2020, the state began allowing licensed hunters to shoot feral hogs at night, when they’re most active. Hog hunting had been limited to daytime to curb potential illegal deer hunting.
LSU scientists recently patented a new feral hog bait that comes packed with a poison the hogs’ sensitive snouts can’t easily detect.
LINK
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:31 am to John88
They have been a major problem, but it's getting worse every year. They have basically become nocturnal, and the equipment needed to hunt them is expensive not to mention time consuming.
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:33 am to John88
quote:
Current estimates put the number of hogs at about 900,000, making their population larger than New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Lafayette combined.
What?
As to the rest of the article, how do we fix it?
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:33 am to John88
frick them bitches. Nothing beats mowing a few down with some 308 and a pulsar
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:34 am to Oilfieldbiology
As to the rest of the article, how do we fix it?
--
Call Yawt Yawt!
Link
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Call Yawt Yawt!
Link
This post was edited on 2/21/24 at 12:11 pm
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:35 am to John88
This is supposedly a legit newspaper and they used the term "hog poop"
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:35 am to Oilfieldbiology
quote:
how do we fix it?
Let’s ride, baws
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:39 am to John88
quote:
Wild hogs chomp and stomp their way through $90 million worth of Louisiana crops
just glad to see OP's wife is finally eating some veggies
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:40 am to John88
What would it take to solve this problem?
Let's take the moonshot approach, money is no object:
Cash rewards? This won't work. People will game the system and breed them for money. It would have to be heavily regulated.
Annual, or more frequent, Hog Rodeo hunts in each parish, with big money prizes.
Scientific breakthrough that has bait that sterilizes them.
Let's take the moonshot approach, money is no object:
Cash rewards? This won't work. People will game the system and breed them for money. It would have to be heavily regulated.
Annual, or more frequent, Hog Rodeo hunts in each parish, with big money prizes.
Scientific breakthrough that has bait that sterilizes them.
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:40 am to John88
We have to take the wins wherever we find them.
Woooooooo pig.
This post was edited on 2/21/24 at 11:41 am
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:42 am to John88
Hogs are one of the truly delicious pests. It still baffles me how we haven't turned this into an opportunity. Is it too costly to trap or hunt them and sell the meat? I know there is red tape for selling wild game, but this just seems like an opportunity squandered.
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:42 am to John88
quote:
Current estimates put the number of hogs at about 900,000, making their population larger than New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Lafayette combined.
Stats like that and the Supreme Court is going to make Landry redraw the maps again to ensure they have fair representation.
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:43 am to Bjorn Cyborg
quote:
Annual, or more frequent, Hog Rodeo hunts in each parish, with big money prizes.
Would need to be damn near monthly.
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:43 am to John88
Would they make good sausage?
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:43 am to John88
Curing salt can take them out. The state should just put out a bunch of curing salt.
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:44 am to John88
Let us know where to be so we can shoot them
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:45 am to Dire Wolf
Shot 10 of them from Aug-December last year, haven't been back out to our farm in last 2 months but fun killing and harvesting them for sausage
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:46 am to danilo
They make a great sausage, if they are big enough you can get a rack of ribs
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:48 am to John88
Why don't we take the prison guards out with their trucks to shoot as many as possible at a time then have the prisoners field dress them & load them into trucks?
They can feed the prisoners as well as the homeless.
Bing. Bang. Boom.
They can feed the prisoners as well as the homeless.
Bing. Bang. Boom.
Posted on 2/21/24 at 11:50 am to YungBuck
quote:
They make a great sausage, if they are big enough you can get a rack of ribs
Get on it baws!
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