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Journal ArticleDOI

Wild boar populations up, numbers of hunters down? A review of trends and implications for Europe.

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TLDR
It is concluded that recreational hunting is insufficient to limit wild boar population growth and that the relative impact of hunting onWild boar mortality had decreased, and more human-wild boar conflicts are expected unless this trend is reversed.
Abstract
Across Europe, wild boar numbers increased in the 1960s-1970s but stabilised in the 1980s; recent evidence suggests that the numbers and impact of wild boar has grown steadily since the 1980s. As hunting is the main cause of mortality for this species, we reviewed wild boar hunting bags and hunter population trends in 18 European countries from 1982 to 2012. Hunting statistics and numbers of hunters were used as indicators of animal numbers and hunting pressure. The results confirmed that wild boar increased consistently throughout Europe, while the number of hunters remained relatively stable or declined in most countries. We conclude that recreational hunting is insufficient to limit wild boar population growth and that the relative impact of hunting on wild boar mortality had decreased. Other factors, such as mild winters, reforestation, intensification of crop production, supplementary feeding and compensatory population responses of wild boar to hunting pressure might also explain population growth. As populations continue to grow, more human-wild boar conflicts are expected unless this trend is reversed. New interdisciplinary approaches are urgently required to mitigate human-wild boar conflicts, which are otherwise destined to grow further.

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African Swine Fever Virus Biology and Vaccine Approaches.

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Scientific opinion on African swine fever

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References
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Book

European Ungulates and their Management in the 21st Century

TL;DR: The present status and future challenges for European ungulate management M. Apollonio, R. Anderson and R. Putman Index are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of wild boar (Sus scrofa) in its introduced and native range: a review

TL;DR: This review found that most of the published literature examines boar effects in their introduced range and little is available from the native distribution, and identified research gaps and urged the need to lower wild boar densities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diet of wild boar Sus scrofa in Western Europe, with particular reference to consumption of agricultural crops

TL;DR: Seasonal, interannual and regional differences in the diet, together with its striking overall breadth, indicate that wild boar are opportunistic omnivores whose diet, in any particular instance, is largely determined by the relative availability of different food types.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predators and people: conservation of large carnivores is possible at high human densities if management policy is favourable

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the hypothesis that large carnivores can persist at high human densities when the management regime is more favourable and found no clear relationship between present carnivore distribution and human population density.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population dynamics in wild boar Sus scrofa: ecology, elasticity of growth rate and implications for the management of pulsed resource consumers

TL;DR: The population dynamics of wild boar is investigated to assist the development of effective management strategies for this species and possibly for other pulsed resource consumers, and management strategies should be based on separate elasticity analyses for different environmental conditions.
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