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Competition
& Environmental Concerns
Feral hog food preferences can hardly be mentioned without the
issue of competition coming up. The potential for feral hog competition with
native wildlife for food, cover, water or space is always a concern for
landowners and managers. There is documentation of potential competition for
food with deer, turkey, waterfowl, squirrels, raccoons, opossums, foxes,
bobcats, javelinas, bears, sandhill cranes and chipmunks. You may not be
concerned with all of these species but they are listed to emphasize the
diverse diet of the feral hog. Competition for food is usually seasonal. For
instance, in south-central Oklahoma and north-central Texas, competition for
acorns between feral hogs, white-tailed deer and turkey may be most severe in
the fall and winter.
Riparian
areas and associated plants can be severely altered or destroyed by feral hog
activity. |
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Depending on the intended use or ecological status of pastures or meadows,
rooting such as this can be an advantage or disadvantage to the landowner or
manager. |
There have been many reports regarding the effects feral hogs have on vegetative
communities as a result of feeding and/or rooting. These effects can change
soil properties such as water and mineral cycles. Rooting, if severe enough,
can also alter plant community successional sequences. The effect these
activities have on the vegetation varies from positive to negative depending on
the area and type of vegetation.
Positive effects may include increased quality of seed beds, increased water
infiltration, shift in plant succession toward increased diversity, accelerated
decomposition of organic matter and increased mixing of soil horizons. Negative
effects may include soil erosion, consumption of native seed crops, consumption
of threatened or endangered species, altered plant succession in monocultures
or native rangeland and reduction of overall species diversity.
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