Wild
Boar are back
 | | The
boars are back but not everyone is delighted |
They're hideous,
they're hairy and they're here. After an absence of 300 years wild boar
are back in the English countryside, and one of their new strongholds is the Forest
of Dean in Gloucestershire. But should we let them stay? The new
series of 'Inside Out West' on BBC ONE features one of the UK's hottest conservation
debates.
| THE BOAR NECESSITIES | | An
adult boar can weigh up to 200kg.
They can run faster than Linford Christie.
They
can be up to one metre in height.
After two years of age the male boar
grows tusks.
Wild boar are omnivorous, eating plant and animal matter.
They
have poor eyesight but a keen sense of smell and exceptional hearing.
In
captivity boar can live for 25 years.
| The problem is
that for many people the wild boar are a menace. Farmers particularly are
worried about the possibility they could spread disease. Forest of Dean
farmer Richard Vaughan keeps a herd of rare breed pigs and is not a fan of wild
boar: "Disease is a major concern. We don't have classic swine fever
in this country. "Thank goodness we don't. It would be a ghastly problem.
"It would make the foot and mouth thing seem fairly small in comparison
and there are heaps of other diseases that pigs can have. "The
current population of wild boar should be exterminated. Then the government should
stop and consider how it goes forward. It's easy enough to introduce them. It's
very hard to get rid of a population you don't want."
There
have also been incidents where wild boar have attacked and injured people who
disturbed them. And it's not uncommon for farm land to be churned up as
the wild boar dig for food. Others though say the wild boar should be protected
as a formally native species. The government is about to make a decision
about what to do after a big consultation exercise with the public. One
option is to eradicate the wild boar population entirely but this would be costly
and difficult. Another option is to do nothing and allow the population
to re-establish itself. Or there may be a middle ground, introducing some
form of management of the herd. Inside Out West goes on the trail of the
wild boar, using a specially erected hide in a clearing. And after two
days of silently waiting, their efforts are rewarded as they spot eight wild boar
foraging for food on the forest floor.
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