New Feral Pig Bait Shows Promise

As the feral pig problem continues to explode throughout parts of the U.S., a new bait and delivery system may help reduce the population of feral pigs, scientists with Louisiana State University AgCenter say.

Feral hogs
Feral hogs
(USDA Wildlife Services)

As the feral pig problem continues to explode throughout parts of the U.S., scientists with the Louisiana State University AgCenter and the LSU Department of Chemistry are developing a bait and delivery system to help reduce the population of feral pigs.

Glen Gentry, LSU AgCenter feral hog specialist, and John Pojman, a chemistry professor, have been working for years to create a bait and delivery system that minimizes the risk to off-target animals, the LSU AgCenter reports.

Scientists had to choose a formula that was more attractive to hogs based on features such as smell and texture than other animals such as deer or raccoons.

“It took us two years to determine what we were going to use in our matrix,” Gentry said in the release. “We landed on dehydrated fish. But that’s not before we went through things such as maple syrup or marshmallows.”

Sodium nitrite, a common food additive in products such as bacon, is lethal to pigs at fairly low levels, the researchers explained. The problem with sodium nitrite is it breaks down when it comes into contact with moisture, giving off a chlorine-like odor that pigs find unappealing, the article said.

Their first thought was to encapsulate the sodium nitrite, similar to a gel cap. But Pojman and his doctoral students came up with an alternative idea.

“All we had to do was raise the pH,” Pojman said in the article. “Using some basic general chemistry and putting some additives to keep the pH high enough, we can make it so it is stable.”

Doctoral students Anthony Mai and Anowar Khan helped develop the bait, which has a round and soft texture. When dropped from a height of approximately 4 feet, it will bounce nearly a foot, the researchers said. The soft texture allows the pigs to swallow it whole, leaving no remains of the bait for any other animals that might come along.

Feral hogs have a unique metabolism, the report said, so sodium nitrite is more effective and poses a low risk to humans. Even if the hogs ate a sublethal dose and a hunter were to kill it and eat it later, researchers said there is no danger to them or if a hog does die and scavengers find it, they would not be contaminated either.

Another part of the solution involves delivering the baits when hogs are actively feeding, the article said. One of their prototypes can deliver up to 20 baits when it is activated.

In addition, the system has a live feed camera and a person can monitor from their home or their phone. If the camera sends an alert and shows pigs are present and feeding, baits can be released remotely. This feature also can prevent other species from being fed the baits.

More from Farm Journal’s PORK:

How Colorado Eliminated Feral Hogs

Wild Pig Wars: Controversy Over Hunting, Trapping in Missouri

Feral Hog Stomachs Tell Story of Destruction

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