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Opportunistic Predation of Wild Turkey Nests by Wild Pigs
Authors:Heather N. Sanders  David G. Hewitt  Humberto L. Perotto-Baldivieso  Kurt C. Vercauteren  Nathan P. Snow
Affiliation:1. Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute, Texas A&M University, 700 University Boulevard, Kingsville, TX, 78363 USA;2. USDA/APHIS/Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, 4101 LaPorte Avenue, Fort Collins, CO, 80521 USA
Abstract:Wild pigs (Sus scrofa; i.e., feral hogs, feral swine) are considered an invasive species in the United States. Where they occur, they damage agricultural crops and wildlife habitat. Wild pigs also depredate native wildlife, particularly ground-nesting bird species during nesting season. In areas inhabited by wild turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo), nest destruction caused by wild pigs may affect recruitment. There is debate whether wild pigs actively seek ground-nesting bird nests or depredate them opportunistically. To address this debate, in 2016 we examined the movements of wild pigs relative to artificial wild turkey nests (i.e., control [no artificial nests], moderate density [12.5–25 nests/km2], and high density [25–50 nests/km2]) throughout the nesting season (i.e., early, peak, and late) in south-central Texas, USA. We found no evidence that wild pigs learned to seek and depredate wild turkey nests relative to nest density or nesting periods. Despite wild pigs being important nest predators, depredation was not a functional response to a pulsed food resource and can only be associated with overlapping densities of wild pigs and nests. Protecting reproductive success of wild turkeys will require reducing wild pig densities in nesting habitat prior to nesting season. © 2019 The Wildlife Society.
Keywords:feral swine  foraging behavior  invasive species  Meleagris gallopavo  nest depredation  pulsed resource consumer  Sus scrofa  Texas  wild turkey
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