Wild pigs are one of theย most damaging invasive speciesย on Earth, and they do more than just damage crops and plants.

Carbon hoofprint: wild pigs release as many emissions as 1 million cars a year
Photo: Pixabay/Andrea Gibhardt
Whether you call them feral pigs, boar, swine, hogs, or even razorbacks, wild pigs are one of theย most damaging invasive speciesย on Earth, and theyโre notorious forย damaging agriculture and native wildlife.
A big reason theyโre so harmful is because theyย uproot soilย at vast scales, like tractors ploughing a field. Ourย new research, published today, is the first to calculate the global extent of this and its implications for carbon emissions.
Our findings were staggering. We discovered the cumulative area of soil uprooted by wild pigs is likely the same area as Taiwan. This releases 4.9 million tonnes of carbon dioxide each year โ the same as one million cars. The majority of these emissions occur in Oceania.
Aย huge portion of Earthโs carbonย is stored in soil, so releasing even a small fraction of this into the atmosphere can have a huge impact on climate change.
The problem with pigs
Wild pigs (Sus scrofa) are native throughout much of Europe and Asia, but today they live on every continent except Antarctica, making them one of the mostย widespread invasive mammalsย on the planet. An estimatedย three millionย wild pigs live in Australia alone.
Itโs estimated that wild pigs destroy more thanย A$100 millionย (US$74 million) worth of crops and pasture each year in Australia, and more thanย US$270 millionย (A$366 million) in just 12 states in the USA.
Wild pigs have also been found to directly threaten 672 vertebrate and plant species acrossย 54 different countries. This includes imperilled Australian ground frogs, tree frogs and multiple orchid species, as pigs destroy their habitats and prey on them.
Their geographic range isย expected to expandย in the coming decades, suggesting their threats to food security and biodiversity will likely worsen. But here, letโs focus on their contribution to global emissions.
Previous research has highlighted the potential contribution of wild pigs to greenhouse gas emissions, but only at local scales. One such study was conducted for three years in hardwood forests of Switzerland. The researchers found wild pigs caused soil carbon emissions to increase by aroundย 23% per year.
Similarly, a study in the Jigong Mountains National Nature Reserve in China found soil emissionsย increased by more than 70%ย per year in places disturbed by wild pigs.
To find out what the impact was on a global scale, we ran 10,000 simulations ofย wild pig population sizesย in their non-native distribution, including in the Americas, Oceania, Africa and parts of Southeast Asia.
For each simulation, we determined the amount of soil they would disturb usingย another model from a different study. Lastly, we used local case studies to calculate the minimum and maximum amount of wild pig-driven carbon emissions.
And we estimate the soil wild pigs uproot worldwide each year is likely between 36,214 and 123,517 square kilometres โ or between the sizes of Taiwan and England.
Most of this soil damage and associated emissions occur in Oceania due to the large distribution of wild pigs there, and the amount of carbon stored in the soil in this region.
So how exactly does disturbing soil release emissions?
Wild pigs use their tough snouts to excavate soil in search of plant parts such as roots, fungi and invertebrates. This โploughingโ behaviour commonly disturbs soil at aย depth of about five to 15 centimetres, which is roughly the same depth asย crop tillingย by farmers.
Because wild pigs areย highly socialย and often feed in large groups, they can completely destroy a small paddock in a short period. This makes them a formidable foe to the organic carbon stored in soil.
In general, soil organic carbon is the balance between organic matter input into the soil (such as fungi, animal waste, root growth and leaf litter) versus outputs (such as decomposition, respiration and erosion). This balance is anย indicator of soil health.
When soils are disturbed, whether from ploughing a field or from an animal burrowing or uprooting, carbon is released into the atmosphere as a greenhouse gas.
This is because digging up soil exposes it to oxygen, and oxygen promotes the rapid growth of microbes. These newly invigorated microbes, in turn, break down the organic matter containing carbon.
Tough and cunning
Wild pig control isย incredibly difficult and costly due to their cunning behaviour, rapid breeding rate, and overall tough nature. For example, wild pigs have been known toย avoid trapsย if they had been previously caught, and they are skilled atย changing their behaviourย to avoid hunters.
In Australia, management efforts includeย coordinated hunting eventsย to slow the spread of wild pig populations. Other techniques include setting traps and installing fences to prevent wild pig expansion, or aerial control programs.
Some of these control methods can also cause substantial carbon emissions, such as using helicopters for aerial control and other vehicles for hunting. Still, the long-term benefits of wild pig reduction may far outweigh these costs.
Working towards reduced global emissions is no simple feat, andย our studyย is another tool in the toolbox for assessing the threats of this widespread invasive species.
This article was written by Christopher J. O’Bryan, a postdoctoral research fellow at the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences of the University of Queensland; Eve McDonald-Madden, an associate professor at the University of Queensland; Jim Hone, emeritus professor at University of Canberra; Matthew H. Holden, a lecturer at the School of Mathematics and Physics at the University of Queensland; and Nicholas R Patton, a Ph.D. Candidate at the University of Canterbury.
It is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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