Chavarria, Pedro Mazier (2006-12). Assessing the impact of feral hog populations on the natural resources of Big Thicket National Preserve. Master's Thesis. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • The Big Thicket National Preserve (BTNP) is a unit of the National Park Service
    whose mission prioritizes conservation of its wildlands in the United States. One threat
    to natural resources of the BTNP has been impacts associated with feral hog (Sus scrofa)
    activities. Population numbers of this non-native game species have increased
    throughout Texas, including areas within the preserve. Recreational hunting permitted
    by the BTNP has served as a means of controlling hog numbers, although the reported
    amounts of hog damage to park resources appear to have increased in recent years.
    Population reduction of feral hogs and mitigation of their impacts require research that
    documents and validates feral hog impacts on park resources. Here, I evaluated (1)
    population trends of feral hogs for the past 20 years via data from hunter-card surveys
    and track-counts, and (2) feral hog impacts on native vegetation for 3 management units
    of the BTNP.
    Results from my analysis suggest a nearly 3-fold increase in hog numbers
    throughout the preserve since 1981. The overall damage to vegetation from hog rooting
    or wallowing averaged to 28% among the 3 units of the BTNP. Landscape features such
    as topography, soil moisture, soil type, and dominant vegetative cover types were used to predict hog damage. Floodplains had the most damage in the Big Sandy unit (45%),
    while flatlands were mostly impacted in the Turkey Creek unit (46%), and uplands in the
    Lance Rosier unit (32%). Vegetative cover was an important variable in explaining
    variation in hog damage throughout the 3 units of the preserve. Impacts were more
    widespread across different vegetative strata than previously believed. Study results also
    support the premise that hog damage in the BTNP parallels the increase in hog
    abundance over the past 20 years. A more aggressive program for population reduction
    of feral hogs and mitigation of their impacts is recommended for the BTNP to continue
    to meet its legal mandates for conservation.

publication date

  • December 2006