But the agency needs more firepower for another kind of rural
reckoning and is gearing up with thermal imaging weapons.
In its crosshairs are aggressive feral hogs that can weigh more than
400 lbs (180 kg) and have been known to carry off newborn calves.
They cause about $1.5 billion of damage every year to farm
communities and fields, say department officials, and now there are
worries they may help spread a deadly pig virus.
So the USDA wants to buy thermal scopes that snap onto high-powered
rifles to kill the wild beasts.
"We're going to get them, oh yes we are," said Jason Wilking with
USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), which has
put out bids for 11 scopes since April 7.
The thermal scopes are part of a $20 million nationwide project to
combat the feral swine, which have gobbled down apples in New York
state, cleaned out cornfields in North Carolina, and even devoured
bovine calves in Mississippi.
USDA scientists now have concerns the hogs may play a part in
spreading Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea virus (PEDv). While not a danger
to humans, the disease has killed 7 million piglets. But no evidence
has yet been found linking feral swine to the lethal pig disease.
The project will also test for the spread of diseases such as swine
influenza, swine brucellosis and trichinosis, one of the bacteria
that feral swine have been found to carry that can threaten human
health.
The animals, thought to have been introduced to the United States
centuries ago by early Spanish explorers, have migrated west to
California and north to Wisconsin from Texas and southern states,
where they plagued farmers for decades. They're closely related to
the Eurasian wild boar, say scientists, and the two have been known
to interbreed.
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Feral hogs travel in herds, breed quickly and are good at adapting
to their environment. Bruce Leopold, executive director of the
Center for Resolving Human-Wildlife Conflicts at Mississippi State
University, said they have even learned to become nocturnal after
one of their group has been shot by a hunter.
The thermal scopes, priced around $12,000 apiece on eBay, will allow
APHIS to make night time attacks and help "lethally remove" the
swine, USDA APHIS spokeswoman Carol Bannerman said. Hand held, the
expensive devices can be used to search for darkened areas that
indicate the location of animals, or they can be attached to
weapons, sniper-style.
The USDA has various means to zoom in on herds, including "Judas
Pig," a technique in which feral sows with radio transmitter collars
are released back to their wild herds.
Another tactic under consideration: drones.
"We could use the drones to photograph areas with infrared film that
can pick up signatures of pigs on the ground," Leopold said. "It'd
be cheaper than using aircraft."
There is no word yet on whether the drones will join the hunt.
(Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Alden Bentley)
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