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Kansas winning the war against wild hogs

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WICHITA, Kan. (MCT) — Most of America is losing the war on feral hogs.

Last year in the United States, an estimated 5 million wild swine caused about $1.6 billion in damage to crops, lawns, wildlife habitat and by introducing diseases to domestic animals.

They’ve expanded to about 40 states, about double from two decades ago, and within those states their range and populations are growing quickly.

Kansas is the lone exception.

From about 2,500 about six years ago, the state now has about 1,000 feral hogs, according to Curran Salter, a U.S. Department of Agriculture wildlife-services biologist. That has made Kansas the envy of other states.

“We’re very interested in what’s going on in Kansas,” said Rex Martensen, of the Missouri Department of Conservation. “I think Kansas was smart early on.”

“A lot of other states are watching Kansas closely,” said Seth Swafford, USDA wildlife services director for Iowa and Missouri. “We’re paying attention.”

On the road

By 7 a.m. one day last week, Salter had been on the go for about four hours. He was heading to where he hoped to reduce the Kansas population of feral hogs by a dozen.

“I got this truck in mid-January and it already has 62,000 miles on it,” he said as he drove through Cowley County. “People think this sounds like a cool job, but I doubt they would if they knew the time it takes.”

Based out of Hoisington, near Great Bend, Salter keeps tabs on Kansas’ half-dozen or so feral hog populations.

A few are scattered along the Cimarron River in southwest Kansas and in southern Barber County. Bourbon County, near Fort Scott, has Kansas’ highest wild pig population, which Salter estimates at 800.

He also sometimes monitors areas where localized populations once thrived before the USDA and some state agencies went to work.

“Fort Riley hasn’t had any pigs since about 2000,” Salter said. “Nobody has seen much for a couple of years in that area of Barber, Pratt and Kiowa counties. There were probably 800 to 900 there.”

Last week he hoped to find the only hogs confirmed in Cowley County waiting in a special trap. About 250 wild swine have been killed there in past years.

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