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Home / Environment / Florida's War on Feral Pigs Escalates: Aerial Hunt Begins

Florida's War on Feral Pigs Escalates: Aerial Hunt Begins

17 Jan

•

Summary

  • Aerial operations against feral hogs will close parts of St. Marks Refuge.
  • Florida ranks fifth nationally with an estimated half million feral hogs.
  • Feral hogs pose a biological threat, carrying diseases and damaging ecosystems.
Florida's War on Feral Pigs Escalates: Aerial Hunt Begins

In an escalating effort to control invasive feral hog populations, Florida wildlife officials have initiated aerial operations within a section of the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge. Beginning January 20, 2026, parts of the refuge and a national scenic trail will be temporarily closed to facilitate these airborne management efforts. This move targets areas with limited access, such as coastal marshes, where hogs are prevalent.

Florida grapples with an estimated half million feral hogs, ranking fifth nationally for this invasive species. Introduced centuries ago, these animals have no natural predators and reproduce rapidly. They pose a severe ecological threat by outcompeting native wildlife for food, consuming fawns and eggs, uprooting vegetation, and polluting water sources. They are also carriers of diseases like Swine Brucellosis and Pseudorabies.

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The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, alongside the USDA's National Feral Swine Damage Management Program, is conducting this operation. The goal is to eliminate as many hogs as possible, leaving carcasses for natural scavengers. This intensive culling method highlights the severity of the feral hog problem across all 67 Florida counties and the ongoing challenge of managing invasive species.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Helicopters are used for aerial operations in St. Marks to manage feral hog populations in hard-to-access areas like coastal marshes and reduce their ecological damage.
Florida is estimated to have half a million feral hogs, making it a significant problem for the state's ecosystems and native wildlife.
Feral hogs can carry Swine Brucellosis, which can infect humans, and Pseudorabies, which is fatal to dogs but not humans.

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