Trust in others and prior experience with feral hogs were significant factors in whether landowners would commit effort and dollars to controlling the destructive animals, two studies have found.
Once a meme, free-ranging swine have become a real problem — one that has given rise to a wide array of potential solutions. Photographs by Callaghan O’Hare Text by Emily Anthes Pigs are not native to ...
The state Plant Board on Wednesday deferred a decision on a proposal to establish a new classification for pesticides containing the drug warfarin used in feral hog bait. The board voted to delay a ...
TENNESSEE/KENTUCKY BORDER (WKRN) — The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency and the Kentucky ...
Each winter, a targeted initiative to reduce the number of feral swine unfolds in the Land Between the Lakes National ...
If you live alongside them, you understand how quickly suburban feral hogs can stop feeling quirky and fun to have in your neighborhood. The damage they cause is expensive and routine, as feral hogs ...
Trust in others and prior experience with feral hogs were significant factors in whether landowners would commit effort and ...