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LSU receives patent for Hog bait poison

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    LSU receives patent for Hog bait poison

    LSU researchers receive patent for feral hog bait

    Bait lethal to feral swine, but has minimal impact on the environment and nontarget species.

    After years of research aimed at finding an effective way to control exploding populations of feral hogs, a patent has been issued for a bait developed by scientists with the Louisiana State University AgCenter and LSU Department of Chemistry.

    The bait uses sodium nitrite, which is lethal to feral swine, the culprits behind millions of dollars in damage to agricultural fields and forestlands in Louisiana and across the country. But the bait has minimal impact on the environment and nontarget species. With a consistency similar to gummy bears, it is shaped into golf ball-sized spheres, tastes fishy and even glows under blacklight.

    The patent was issued Aug. 8 to LSU with the inventors listed as Glen Gentry, an animal scientist and director of the LSU AgCenter Bob R. Jones-Idlewild Research Station in Clinton; John Pojman, an LSU chemistry professor; and Baylen Thompson, a former graduate student who worked under Pojman.

    “This is a milestone for us,” Gentry said.

    The bait has been in the works for several years. Scientists began looking for a solution as problems with feral hogs grew in rural areas.

    In Louisiana alone, the feral hog population has doubled in the past decade, with their numbers currently estimated at about 1 million. They travel in packs and are known for rooting up fields in search of food. AgCenter experts have determined they cause about $91 million in damage every year in the state.

    The hogs have a rapid reproductive rate that has complicated population control efforts. A sow can have two litters of about six piglets yearly, outpacing the number of hogs that can be removed from the landscape through hunting and trapping.

    The bait offers a more effective control method with the bonus of being humane, Gentry said. Within three hours of consuming the bait, hogs become sleepy and die.

    Sodium nitrite is an ideal toxicant, he said, because it is deadly to swine and eventually breaks down into compounds that do not harm other species or pose environmental concerns.

    Pojman and his students were instrumental in adjusting the pH of the bait matrix to stabilize the sodium nitrite, slowing down the conversion to nonlethal compounds so hogs have enough time to consume the bait.

    It took many tries over the years to develop a bait that worked and that hogs would be willing to eat. Gentry and his team tried various ingredients to entice the hogs before landing on dehydrated fish.

    The rubbery texture is critical, as it helps ensure the bait doesn’t fall apart when hogs bite into it. That limits the amount of scraps on the ground and helps protect nontarget species. Fluorescence is added into the matrix to make it easy for users to see whether any pieces are left behind by shining a blacklight.

    The scientists are now focusing on conducting additional field trials and studies on shelf life. They also are looking for the best ways to deliver the bait, with possible solutions including burying the bait so hogs can root it up or releasing it from a feeder using a cellphone.

    “All of this is required before it can be approved by the EPA and released to the public,” Gentry said.

    Stakeholders were instrumental in providing funding for the bait research. Among them are Ann Reiley Jones, the Irene W. and C.B. Pennington Foundation, the Bob R. Jones Wildlife Research Institute, the Louisiana Soybean and Grain Research and Promotion Board, the Louisiana Rice Research and Promotion Board, the Louisiana Legislature and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

    #2
    Sounds promising

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      #3
      Let the games begin!!

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        #4
        How many decades of "exploding populations of feral hogs" can there be before people realize their numbers are not still exploding?

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          #5
          "Exploding Hogs" has a better ring than "Stuffing pork tacos and tearing up crops" more at 5.

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            #6
            So what are we suppose to hunt during the off season ?
            I can see it now. First, All Seasons will come out with a new type of feeder that throws out 'gummy balls' type of bait. Then, they will move on to try to eliminate coyotes. So, will that mean the end of the night vision industry ? Will all you guys with the expensive thermal optics just have real expensive spotting scopes ?

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              #7
              Seems like coons and possums would find that fish-based recipe delicious. Does sodium nitrate not kill them? I wonder how they will propose to the EPA that only hogs will be eating it.

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                #8
                In my best Indian voice.........

                only white man can be dumb enough to poison his own food...

                No dang way the population is exploding. you can hunt them with thermal, trap them, year round pressure, less habitat. Hellicopter hunting.... try this with whitetail and tell me how long they will last. Yes pigs have big litters but we would whipe out every deer there was if we did this for one month of the year with whitetails.

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                  #9
                  It will NEVER be on my place or any other poison for hogs.

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                    #10
                    I'm sure farmers feel different than hunters but putting poison into the environment is a bad idea imho.

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                      #11
                      Not a fan of poison for hogs at all.

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                        #12
                        I will be in line when it is available and if it is cost effective. My neighbor said he lost several thousand(can't remember the actual $#) last year from his soybean harvest, and he is only farming a few 100 acres. Keeping them out of the hay meadows would be my goal.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by jhunter77 View Post

                          No dang way the population is exploding. you can hunt them with thermal, trap them, year round pressure, less habitat. Hellicopter hunting.... try this with whitetail and tell me how long they will last. Yes pigs have big litters but we would whipe out every deer there was if we did this for one month of the year with whitetails.
                          This had to sound better in your head.

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                            #14
                            This will not be an all or none deal. There is no way to poison the full population. If there was, do you really think there would be rats anymore? I hate rats even more than hogs.

                            I'm sure the EPA will mandate applicators licenses to use these, and most likely it will require a special feeder that will deter even more people from using it. My neighbor would be all over this. He has 25,000 acres he farms and ranches. He loses hundreds of acres of wheat, corn, and cotton to wild hogs. No telling how many people that could feed.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Kill em all! They are an invasive destructive species.

                              Comment

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