Wild boar, facts and information (2024)

  • Animals
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Common Name:
Wild Boar

Scientific Name:
Sus scrofa

Type:
Mammals

Diet:
Omnivore

Group Name:
Sounder

Average Life Span:
9 to 10 years

Size:
3 to 6 feet long

Weight:
150 to 220 pounds

Wild boar, facts and information (1)

IUCN Red List Status:
Least concern

Least Concern Extinct

What is a wild boar?

Wild boars—also called feral pigs or hogs—have wreaked much havoc as invasive species in recent years. Native only to Asia, parts of North Africa and most of Europe, they now live on every continent except Antarctica. They're not super picky about their environment either: Wild boar live in forests, steppes, grasslands, wetlands and venture onto farmlands to forage.

What sets these animals apart from domestic pigs? Their history, which begins about 9,000 years agowhen Eurasian wild boar were first domesticated and kept for centuries as farm animals in Europe and Asia. In the 16th century, Europeans brought those pigs with them when they settled in North America, Australia, and beyond. But some of those pigs escaped or were freed, and went on to establish populations in the wild—some even breeding with wild boar that had never been domesticated.

(These hogs are running wild in the U.S.—and spreading disease.)

Appearance

Wild boar are built like domestic pigs, with bulky, thick-set bodies, long, mobile, cartilaginous snouts, black hooves, and medium-length tails. They're usually dark brown or black but can be a variety of colors and have thick skin covered with a coat of coarse hair.

Boars have an extra thick layer of protective skin known as the shield or shoulder plate which helps protect them in their fights for mating rights. Their faces are also weaponized with tusks that they can use as daggers for fighting and self-defense.

Both sexes have tusks though they may be smaller for females, or sows. Sows are smaller in general, averaging about 150 to 170 pounds compared to the males, boars, which weigh between 200 and 220 pounds. It's rare for them to reach more than 200 pounds but they have been documented at over a thousand pounds.

Diet and behavior

These omnivores eat plants,fruits, crops, roots, and nuts, but they are good at adjusting their eating habits to what is available and will also consume bird or turtle eggs, insects, or small animals.They're nocturnal, beginning to forage at around dusk but may change their behavioral patterns depending on human activity or season.

(Read how feral hogs are moving into Canada and building "pigloos.")

Wild boar live in small family groups consisting of females and their young but those groups sometimes come together to form larger clusters called sounders. Males are usually solitary but may form bachelor groupsand will join a sounder during mating season.

Courtship and reproduction

Males that come into the sounder battle with other males for the right to mate with females. The winner begins courtship by making a low vocalization and nuzzling the female. Both may chomp their teeth together, salivate, and urinate, and the male may mark the female with a scent gland.

Once a female is impregnated, gestation lasts almost four months. About a day before she gives birth, called farrowing, the sow leaves the group and prepares a nest of vegetation. The average litter will have four to 12 piglets, and sows can have two litters per year. The piglets begin suckling right away and are weaned at about three to four months.

Piglets are caramel-colored with stripeson their coats to camouflage them in grasses and forests. At about six months they will start to turn color and will get their rich, dark brown-black coloring in about a year.

Human-wildlife conflict

Wild boar populations are considered of a species of least concern by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature because they are abundant in their ranges, which are increasing. They’re also highly adaptable, thriving wherever there is water and tree cover but avoiding extremes of heat or cold.

In fact, they’re considered a harmful invasive species, pushing native species oout of delicate environments, attacking people, destroying public and private property, and carrying the same diseases as domestic pigs, some of which can infect humans.

(The battle to control America’s most ‘destructive’ species: feral pigs.)

Cities all over the world, including Houston, Barcelona, Rome and Hong Kong are seeking a solution to this plethora of pigs, estimated to cause $2.5 billion worth of damage a year in the U.S. alone. In response, the U.S. government has allocated funding for trapping, research, and financial aid for farmers, which can be used to hunt wild boar.

Did you know?

Because of their striped coats, wild boar piglets are sometimes called "humbugs" after a striped British candy.
Woodland Trust

In 2021 a female wild boar rescued two young boar trapped inside a cage trap by manipulating the logs that held the door shut in the Voděradské Bučiny National Nature Reserve in the Czech Republic.
Scientific Reports

The wild boar’s nickname "razorback" comes from a thick line of hair running down their spine that stands up when they get agitated or angry.
Missouri Department of Conservation

Wild boar, facts and information (2024)

FAQs

What are some facts about wild boars? ›

Wild boars are nocturnal animals (active during the night). They will spend 12h in sleep during the day, hidden in the nests made of leaves. An acute sense of smell allows wild boars to detect an edible root or tuber 25 cm (10 inches) below the soil.

How long do wild boars live? ›

The maximum lifespan in the wild is 10–14 years, though few specimens survive past 4–5 years. Boars in captivity have lived for 20 years.

What do wild boar eat? ›

The wild boar is an omnivore, feeding on just about anything edible. Its main diet consists of roots, fallen fruits, nuts and acorns. The boar also feeds on small animals (larvae, snakes, birds, rodents, etc.) and carrion.

What is special about a boar? ›

The animals are swift, nocturnal, and omnivorous and are good swimmers. They possess sharp tusks, and, although they are normally unaggressive, they can be dangerous. From earliest times, because of its great strength, speed, and ferocity, the wild boar has been one of the favourite beasts of the chase.

How fast can wild boars run? ›

Adult feral swine weigh between 75 and 250 pounds on average, but some can get twice as large. This invasive species can reach 3 feet in height and 5 feet in length. Males (boars) are larger than females (sows). Feral swine are muscular and strong, and can run up to 30 miles per hour.

Where do wild boars sleep? ›

A den is used for resting and sleeping. A boar often makes a shelter by cutting long grass and crawling under it to lift it so that it becomes entangled with the tall plants around to form canopies.

What are boar afraid of? ›

Wild boar are afraid of fire, including torches, and will enter the 'frightened' state when it is nearby.

What are wild boars attracted to? ›

The most common bait to attract wild pigs throughout the U.S. and other countries is whole-kernel corn (Zea mays; West et al.

What to do if you see a wild boar? ›

It's surprisingly common for people to attempt to feed wild boar, but remember, you should not approach them. Also, humans feeding wildlife is what draws them into urban areas and we want them to stay in the wild. If you mistakenly find yourself close to a wild boar, stay calm, stay facing it and slowly back away.

What is a boar weakness? ›

HOGS THINK WITH THEIR STOMACHS

Probably the biggest weakness of the feral hog is, well – it's a pig, in every sense of the word. Feral hogs like to “pig out” – they're always hungry and game for a feeding. It's easy to use the feral hog's appetite against them.

Are wild boars intelligent? ›

Wild/feral hogs are extremely intelligent animals, like most animals they can also become creatures of habit therefore over time they can be "patterned" as to their movement preferences, feed times, travel patterns etc. if you do not disrupt there senses.

What can a wild boar do to a human? ›

Harmful organisms and pathogens, carried by feral swine, which can infect humans include diseases such as leptospirosis, toxoplasmosis, brucellosis, tularemia, trichinellosis, swine influenza, salmonella, hepatitis and pathogenic E. coli.

How many wild boars are left? ›

Feral swine have been reported in at least 35 states. Their population is estimated at over 6 million and is rapidly expanding.

How smart are wild boars? ›

FERAL HOGS ARE SMARTER THAN...

They've been said to be smarter than dogs. Smarter than dolphins. Smarter than 3 year-olds? Their cognitive intelligence is high enough that they've been taught to play video games in scientific research.

How big do wild boars get? ›

Sows are smaller in general, averaging about 150 to 170 pounds compared to the males, boars, which weigh between 200 and 220 pounds. It's rare for them to reach more than 200 pounds but they have been documented at over a thousand pounds.

How many babies do wild boars have? ›

After mating, the boar leaves the herd, taking no part in rearing the young. After a gestation period of 112 - 115 days a litter of 3 - 12 piglets is born in the spring.

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