How to translate text using browser tools
12 October 2015 Observations on effects of feral pig (Sus scrofa) age and sex on diet
Jason Wishart, Steven Lapidge, Michael Braysher, Stephen D. Sarre, Jim Hone
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Context.Feral pigs (Sus scrofa) are a destructive invasive species that cause damage to ecologically sensitive areas. Management of biodiversity and of feral pigs assumes the diet of pigs of different ages and sexes are similar.

Aims.We aimed to investigate effects of feral pig age and sex on broad feral pig diet to identify potential at-risk native wildlife species so as to improve biodiversity and feral pig management.

Methods.Diet was determined by macroscopic analysis of the stomach content of 58 aerially shot feral pigs of mixed ages and sexes. The study occurred in the Macquarie Marshes, New South Wales, a Ramsar wetland of international significance.

Results.Feral pigs were largely herbivorous, with vegetable matter being found in all stomachs and contributing to a majority of the food material that was present in each stomach, by volume. Adult feral pigs had significantly more grasses and crop material in their stomachs than juveniles, while juveniles had significantly more forbs in their stomachs than adult feral pigs. Vertebrate prey items included frogs, lizard and snake, but no threatened wildlife species.

Conclusions.Juvenile and adult feral pigs differed in their diet, especially with regards to plant material, which has not been reported previously. There was, however, no difference in the consumption of vertebrate wildlife species between juvenile and adult, or male and female feral pigs. Slow-moving, nocturnal amphibians and reptiles were the most common vertebrate item recorded.

Implications.Biodiversity and feral pig management should recognise plant diet differences between demographic segments of the feral pig population. Further research is recommended to determine if diet differences also occur for threatened wildlife species, which will require more intensive nocturnal sampling.

© CSIRO 2015
Jason Wishart, Steven Lapidge, Michael Braysher, Stephen D. Sarre, and Jim Hone "Observations on effects of feral pig (Sus scrofa) age and sex on diet," Wildlife Research 42(6), 470-474, (12 October 2015). https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15044
Received: 24 June 2014; Accepted: 1 September 2015; Published: 12 October 2015
KEYWORDS
biodiversity
diet analysis
predation
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top