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Xplor reconnects kids to nature and helps them find adventure in their own backyard. Free to residents of Missouri.
A monthly publication about conservation in Missouri. Started in 1938, the printed magazine is free to residents of Missouri.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – Partnerships between the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC), conservation groups, agriculture organizations, and the Missouri Conservation Heritage Foundation (MCHF) forge ahead with the approval of a grant from the MCHF to provide the state's feral hog strike team with additional trapping equipment.
The MCHF grant includes $79,500 and an additional in-kind contribution in the form of labor and equipment equaling a total value of $132,900. Brent Vandeloecht, MDC’s Agriculture Liaison, said the grant will provide 60 additional traps, building materials and trail cameras for the feral hog strike team to assist landowners with feral hog problems. The grant also includes efforts to help spread the educational message that feral hogs are bad for Missouri.
“We continue to have success eliminating hogs and educating the public on the need to continue elimination efforts,” said Vandeloecht. "The grant and the collaboration with our partners ensure the success will continue and we can work with even more private landowners to relieve hog damage on both private and public land.”
The following organizations have partnered with MDC and MCHF to provide these resources for trapping efforts on private and public land, and to fund public education efforts on the dangers of feral hogs:
Feral hogs are not wildlife and are a serious threat as they’ve expanded their range in the U.S. from 17 to 38 states over the past 30 years, according to Vandeloecht. Their populations grow rapidly because feral hogs can breed any time of year and produce two litters of one to seven piglets every 12 to 15 months.
Economic loss from feral hog damage in the U.S. is estimated at more than 1.5 billion dollars per year. They damage property, agriculture, and natural resources by their aggressive rooting of soil in addition to their trampling and consumption of crops as part of their daily search for food. They also will eat young wildlife, such as turkey poults and new fawns. Feral hogs are also known to carry diseases such as swine brucellosis, pseudorabies, trichinosis and leptospirosis, which are a threat to Missouri agriculture and human health.
"Research shows that about 70 percent of the feral hog population needs to be removed yearly to keep populations of feral hogs from increasing," Vandeloecht said. "We cannot achieve that without this partnership to increase equipment availability and we won't achieve that without continued education and cooperation with the public."
MDC asks that landowners report, don’t shoot feral hogs. By reporting hog sightings, landowners can receive assistance in trapping the full sounder of feral hogs on their land. For more information on feral hogs in Missouri, or to report a sighting, go online to mdc.mo.gov/feralhog.